[Congressional Record Volume 154, Number 37 (Wednesday, March 5, 2008)]
[House]
[Pages H1319-H1323]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                       30-SOMETHING WORKING GROUP

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 18, 2007, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Meek) is recognized 
for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
  Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, it is an honor to come before the 
House once again. As you know, the 30-Something Working Group comes to 
the floor every week to discuss issues that are at the forefront of 
what is going on in the country, and there are a lot of good things 
that are happening here under the Capitol dome on behalf of the 
American people.
  As you know, many times we focus on the issue of Iraq, and just to 
continue to keep the Congress focused on that very issue, and also to 
keep the American people tuned in on what is happening, as of March 4, 
2008, total deaths in Iraq, U.S. casualties, are 3,973; total number of 
wounded in action and returned to duty is 16,211; and the total number 
of wounded in action when not returning to duty is 13,109.
  As we look at these issues and continue to focus on trying to get out 
of Iraq more sooner than later, I definitely want the Members to 
continue to focus on the sacrifice that many of our men and women are 
carrying out on a daily basis, and their families, I must add.
  Just a case in point, Mr. Speaker, just yesterday I returned. I went 
to the opening of the Florida legislature. Because of bad weather, I 
ended up finding myself traveling through Atlanta, and I ended up 
getting here late yesterday evening. There was a soldier on the plane 
with us, and I noticed him sitting a couple of seats up ahead of me. I 
didn't have the opportunity to have a discussion with him. As a member 
of the Armed Services Committee, I always enjoy talking to our men and 
women in uniform.
  He was ahead of me. When he came out of the gate there at the Delta 
terminal, there were about 30 of his family members there that were 
just happy to see him. Tears and prayers being answered for this young 
man coming back home. I understand he is from Virginia.
  I did have the opportunity, I had one of my congressional coins in my 
computer bag, and I had the opportunity to shake his hand after 5 
minutes of celebration from his family. Many of them were thanking God 
for his return. This kind of love is really, if one was to use biblical 
terms, almost close to agape love, the fact that family members had an 
opportunity to see their son, nephew and father and husband return 
back.
  I think we should have the resolve every day, even on weekends, to 
figure out how we can bring our men and women home. I personally don't 
have a close relative or family member that is in theater right now, be 
it in Iraq or Afghanistan, but I want the Members to keep the 
conscience of those that do have individuals that are in harm's way.
  There are a number of families on military bases, a number of 
families that are in subdivisions and communities. There are young 
people that their fathers and mothers were members of the Army Reserve 
and members of the National Guard that have their family or their 
father that is serving in Iraq.
  Even though we see more peaceful days in Iraq and we don't see the 
political achievement that the Iraqi Government was supposed to make, I 
still want to share with the Members of how long can we keep that 
peace, and at what cost, not only in life but in U.S. taxpayer dollars.
  As we talk about infrastructure issues here in this country, as we 
talk about the economy in this country, in Iraq we are financing new 
infrastructure for the Iraqi people. Here, in the United States, we 
still have crumbling bridges, projects that are still on the drawing 
board to be carried out, and they are not being carried out.
  So as we get into this big discussion with the White House over the 
budget, as we have the debates in committees, I just want every Member, 
Democrat and Republican, to think about those that are living in the 
real world that are looking forward to a celebration that I witnessed 
last night.
  With that, Mr. Speaker, I would like to talk a little bit about 
rebuilding our economy and the economic forum on Wednesday that the 
House Democratic leaders hosted, our second economic forum, the forum 
which convened national experts on economic and financial issues. It 
will address the state of America's economy. I think as we look at this 
whole New Direction Congress, it's important that we look at that we 
have already passed a bipartisan stimulus package that wasn't all that 
it should have been or all that it could have been, if I can say that, 
but it was something. I know that we are going to be working very hard 
to do even more. It will help create 500,000 American jobs. The plan 
was targeted as a temporary fix to allow rebates for those families 
that are most at risk in this bad economy, in this bad economic 
turndown. I think later this spring, the recovery rebates put hundreds 
of dollars, up to $600 per individual and $1,200 per married couple, 
plus a $300 tax credit in the hands of more than 30 million Americans. 
That is a bipartisan piece of legislation, and I think that it's very, 
very important that we continue to march in that direction.

  I also think that it's important that when we look at these record 
oil prices and we look at some of the things that we are pushing for 
here on the House floor, and as we work on the Senate side, I think 
it's important that the Bush administration works with us as we 
continue to rebuild this economy. Many of the Presidential candidates 
are out there talking about different proposals, different packages. 
But I can tell you right now, there's a lot of work to be done, Mr. 
Speaker and Members, until that actually takes place.
  I know that the American people are building a lot of hope and 
enthusiasm around this very issue of the economy, and there are many 
States that are voting now that are looking at this as a primary action 
that they would like to see take place.
  As we also start looking at the economy, we have to also pay 
attention to what some U.S. families are going through these days. For 
many of them, it used to be an unaccepted practice to even purchase a 
car if you couldn't pay for it in cash. It was almost an unaccepted 
practice to use your credit card to pay your light bill or to buy food 
at the grocery store. We are having more Americans that are doing that 
now.
  More credit card companies are sending many of our constituents 
credit cards at very, very low interest rates at the beginning, and 
then 6 months later, kicking in a number of penalties that they are 
going to have to pay. I think it's important that we keep our eyes on 
this very issue.
  This bipartisan feeling and structure that we have here on the floor 
that we built with the economic stimulus package will also help us 
offer a new long-

[[Page H1320]]

term vision to not only lower fuel prices but to lower health care 
costs and increase health care quality. That is something that we tried 
to do, Mr. Speaker, before the closing of the first session of the 
110th Congress, and something that we are going to continue to work on.
  We have made several attempts to be able to lower energy prices and 
create thousands of new green jobs, providing incentives for clean and 
renewable energy. I think that it's very, very important that we do 
that because OPEC knows that we are forever more dependent on them. I 
encourage those cities and counties and States that are moving more 
towards clean burning fuel and flex vehicles and hybrids.
  I was recently in New York and I was very excited to see many of the 
taxicabs are now transferring over to hybrid vehicles made by Ford. I 
personally purchased a Ford Escape, and it's a hybrid. Things have 
gotten better in the Meek family. I think that it's important that we 
all embrace this concept because it is a national security issue, Mr. 
Speaker. I think it's also important that we empower American ingenuity 
and also business tools to win in this global economy.
  Also, I talked a little earlier about the issues of Iraq getting a 
big part of the dollars. But the dollars are not necessarily coming to 
our country and not coming to benefit U.S. families. Just to paint a 
picture so folks don't feel that I am just talking about energy or 
talking about it just for the sake of talking about it, Americans are 
paying more than double for gas than they did when President Bush first 
took office.
  You look at January 22, 2001, it was $1.47. I remember those days 
when I used to fill up the tank. Now, on average, a price of a gallon 
today is $3.13, and some of my constituents would say, That is a low 
number, Congressman. I am paying a lot more than that.
  I think it's important we pay attention. This information is from the 
Energy Information Administration. Again, these are not charts that 
someone made up in the back room and said, This looks good, let's put 
it on the floor. As it relates to gas and oil and home heating costs, 
they have skyrocketed, and so have oil companies' profits. When you 
look at the price of gas here, like I pointed out in 2001, at $1.47, 
you look at 113 percent as relates to the profit line. You look at the 
oil companies, what they have done over the years goes all the way over 
to 2008 and the 310 percent profit, in the billions. I think it's 
important that everyone understand what is happening here as it relates 
to who's paying and who's benefiting. Profits are not a bad word. But 
greed is.
  Mr. Speaker, I don't blame the oil companies, I blame the Republican 
minority that was once the majority, and also I blame the White House 
for giving these oil companies an unfair advantage over the U.S. 
taxpayer. As we start to balance the playing field in a bipartisan way, 
I am encouraging my colleagues, especially on the Republican side, to 
think about the price that their constituents are paying at the 
pleasure of many of these oil companies that are celebrating not only 
record-breaking profits in the billions, but it is really sad for what 
is happening, especially right now in the economy.
  This data was compiled by the Center for American Progress. I think 
that it's important that we look at and also note that there was a 
meeting that I had in my folder, and I need to pull that information 
out, in 2001, with Vice President Cheney and many of the oil executives 
there at the White House, which is the best public housing in the 
United States of America and has the most famous office on the face of 
the Earth, that there was a meeting, and that happened in 2001.

                              {time}  2045

  Well, I can tell you, it must have been a great meeting, because 
there was an energy bill that was passed shortly thereafter that gave 
many of our oil companies an unfair advantage over the U.S. taxpayer 
and what they pay at the pumps.
  These are the facts here: $30 billion in 2002 as it relates to 
profits. If a small business saw this kind of jump, it would no longer 
be a small business. I don't know of a small business outside of 
probably a dot.com company or some sort of search engine that picked up 
a niche and ended up really shooting through the roof as it relates to 
profits. But they are few and far between. But it seems like all of the 
oil companies hit the jackpot after this meeting and the endorsement of 
the Republican Congress.
  In 2002, $30 billion in profits; 2003, $59 billion in profits; 2004, 
$82 billion in profits. Meanwhile, we are paying more at the tank, and 
it is inching up. In 2005, $109 billion in profits; 2006, $118 billion 
in profits; and 2007, $123.3 billion in profits that many of these oil 
companies have earned.
  So when we start talking about turning green, when we start talking 
about making sure that the U.S. taxpayer gets their fair share and has 
a balanced playing field, then we have to talk about investing in the 
Midwest versus the Middle East. We have to talk about creating more 
green opportunities through biofuels and clean burning fuel here in the 
United States that will put people to work here in the United States 
and will maybe turn these companies into investing in the U.S. versus 
the Middle East. I think it is safer. I think it will get us more out 
of the conflicts that we find ourselves in in the Middle East, and I 
believe that it will help our economy beyond what we have seen thus 
far.
  The economy right now is based on how much you can borrow. As you can 
see, the Fed has cut interest rates by half a percentage point, and 
then they cut it again by half a percentage point. So it really has 
been built on how much you can borrow, or how much can you take out of 
the home, which is your financial security.
  Many U.S. taxpayers and many U.S. citizens have found themselves in 
the situation where they have to rob Peter to pay Paul and not have 
those dollars to be able to assist their families in receiving a higher 
education, or being able to assist their families or young people in 
their family, assisting them in starting a new business.
  I think that, Mr. Speaker, when we look at that, we have to look at 
the way that we are digging ourselves out of this hole. Unless we get 
out of Iraq more sooner than later, we will find ourselves continuing 
to see the image of the United States of America financially 
deteriorate in international markets. I think it is important that 
every American pays attention to this.
  I hope I can get my chart that talks about the deficit, because I 
think that it is important that we focus on that, because even when we 
look at the economic stimulus package, it was based on borrowed money. 
It wasn't money because of good financial controls. It wasn't because 
the President and the Office of Budget and Management have done such a 
great job. It is not because we had discipline with the Republican 
Congress that was the Congress before this Congress as it relates to 
fiscal discipline. We now owe foreign nations more than we have ever 
owed them in the history of the Republic.
  I would couch it this way: You have a neighbor that comes over to you 
and knocks on your door and says, can I borrow $40? And you say, well, 
this is my neighbor, I believe he is pretty good for it. I will give 
him the $40. Well, every time you see that neighbor, you are going to 
think about that $40. I don't care if it is the next day. And when they 
are talking to you and they don't necessarily mention anything about 
the $40 that they owe you, now you become a little bitter. Now you 
don't even want to listen to what that person has to say, unless they 
are saying they are going to give you your money back.
  That is the position we are in now in the United States of America. 
We owe China money. We owe them. We owe OPEC countries money. We owe 
them. We owe Iran money. Even though folks run around here talking 
about Iran is a threat, Iran, we owe them money. So when we start to 
think about these issues, we have to think about them as it relates to 
making sure that we move in a way that is fiscally sound, and I think 
that it is important that every Member of Congress pays very close 
attention to that.
  When you look at this war, because it is the 800 pound gorilla that 
is in the room, you have to look at it from the standpoint of saying 
the money that we are spending there, and I have been there three times 
in Iraq, the money we are spending there, what is the return? They say, 
well, who is winning?

[[Page H1321]]

Well, I know that my district is not winning, because I am not able to 
even bring the dollars home I need.
  We have Members running around here on the floor on the Republican 
side saying, oh, we need earmark reform, or we need Member project 
reform, when Republicans ran rampant when they were in charge with all 
kind of projects, bridges-to-nowhere and all kind of meaningless 
projects that are out there.
  Meanwhile, I have a community back in South Florida, they are 
concerned about road money. They are concerned about mass transit. They 
are concerned about health care. They are concerned about education. 
And they want the Federal dollar to be able to make it down there so 
that we can educate the next generation. Not only in what you may call 
a pre-K through 12th grade experience, but also higher education. They 
are concerned about that.
  Meanwhile, here in Washington, D.C. there is a spending spree on how 
much money can we send to Iraq? The last $70 billion I voted against 
going into Iraq. It didn't have any strings attached, it didn't have 
any accountability measures attached to it.
  I remember when I first got here about 6 years ago, there was a 
discussion about we are doing this on the backs of future generations. 
Now the discussion is we are doing it on our own backs right now. We 
are weighing ourselves down and our chin is hitting the ground because 
we have so much weight on it. How much weight? Let me just point it out 
here. Hopefully the chart will make it here before I finish this 
segment of what I have to say.
  When you look at it, and I have a smaller chart right here, hopefully 
we will have the bigger one, 224 years, 1776 up until 2000, 42 
presidents, 42 presidents were only able to borrow $1.01 trillion from 
foreign nations. That is $1.01 trillion from foreign nations.
  In 7 years, 6 years of a Republican Congress that was rubber-stamping 
everything that the President brought to this Chamber, President Bush 
and that Republican Congress were able to run up $1.33 trillion. That 
is in 7 years, versus what U.S. presidents in 224 years were able to 
accomplish.
  Why do I point that out? I point that out to shed light on this 
deficit issue. When you pass tax cuts that you can't afford for the 
very super-wealthy when they are not asking for it, you have two wars 
going on and you really don't have a plan to take yourself out of the 
first war in Iraq, I think former President Bill Clinton says it best 
when you talk about Iraq. I will go back to the neighbor scenario, Mr. 
Speaker.
  If there is a fire and your neighbor's house burns, it is the 
neighborly thing to do for you to accept that individual into your 
home, and probably their family. All of us would do it. We are all 
people of goodwill. You will probably let them stay. If you didn't have 
an extra room, you would let them stay in the living room on the couch, 
pull the sleeper couch out and let them stay there. Maybe a month will 
pass and they will still be there. Maybe some will even allow them to 
stay 6 months. Maybe even a really nice person would let them stay a 
year-and-a-half. But 5 years later, it is no longer about the fire.

  So I think it is important that we look at this issue of getting out 
of Iraq more sooner than later, because it is no longer about the fire, 
it is about something else.
  So when we look at this, as I just pointed this out and I want to 
make sure Members can see it, $1.01 trillion, $1.33 trillion. Seven 
years, this is what happened under not only the leadership of the Bush 
administration, but also the Republican Congress. Where did this come 
from? The U.S. Department of Treasury, which the Secretary of the 
Treasury is appointed by the President of the United States and 
confirmed by the Senate. I think it is important that people understand 
that I am not on the floor sharing fiction, that I am actually sharing 
fact.
  As we look to make these hard decisions, I think it is important that 
Americans understand that we are paying more on the debt service on the 
money that we owe these foreign nations and that we owe overall on the 
debt, we are paying more on that than we are putting into homeland 
security. So when you have folks coming here waiving arms and carrying 
on saying that, well, you know, we have got to protect America. I am 
more standing for protecting America. Oh, I am with the troops. No, I 
am with the troops. I got a tattoo on my chest saying I am with the 
troops. When they come here and make these bold statements and giving 
these great floor statements, I think folks really need to understand 
what is really going on.
  Here is a picture, Mr. Speaker. You talk about the 110th Congress and 
the boldness of Democrats when we came here. With some few Republicans 
voting with us, we voted to stop the President on the surge. When you 
look at the surge, it is costing the U.S. taxpayers billions and 
billions and billions of dollars that, again, from the first chart, 
that we borrowed.
  This is the President and some of our Republican colleagues on the 
other side, as a matter fact, a supermajority of them that were there 
saying, Mr. President, we are going to be with you. We are 40-plus. 
They cannot override you, because we are going to stand with you in 
harmony.
  Here is a picture to make that point, to make it visual for you, 
because I just want to make sure that Members don't feel that there is 
anything that is being shared here that is not true.
  This is the chart, again, talking about the dollars. Look at Japan. 
This is actually in the billions of dollars, $644.3 billion that we owe 
Japan. China has a double margin here. They are up there at $349.6 
billion. I think it is important that everyone understands what is 
happening there. Then it goes on to the U.K., $239.1 billion. These 
numbers are actually higher now. But these are the numbers that I just 
wanted to make sure going across.
  You see this other red bar here that talks about OPEC nations? Those 
are nations that are oil producing nations. They sit in a room and talk 
about what a barrel of oil will cost, and it will affect our 
neighborhoods and heating oil prices and all.
  So when we start talking about the management of the country and 
start talking about how we are going to move in the right direction, I 
think it is important that everyone pays attention to who is getting 
what they want and who is not getting what they need.
  Here is another example. The President proposed deep cuts in key 
priorities, in the COPS Program, which is Community Oriented Policing. 
I used to be a state trooper. I can tell you that many of my colleagues 
in law enforcement, there are a number of sheriffs, the National 
Association of Sheriffs, the National Association of Chiefs, they all 
fight for this Community Oriented Policing.
  What does it do? Well, it actually makes communities safer, and it 
allows them to be able to put bike patrols and foot patrols in 
neighborhoods where usually you will have crime. It allows them also, 
Mr. Speaker, to be able to go and create after-school programs for 
young people that are at risk. But that has received a 100 percent cut.
  Talk about weatherization assistance. When we look at the whole issue 
of heating oil prices and what it costs to heat a home right now, Mr. 
Speaker, I think it is important for everyone to understand that those 
individuals that are financially challenged, especially those receiving 
Social Security benefits, are not able to receive any assistance 
whatsoever. A 100 percent cut in that program.
  When we look at the Department of Homeland Security, First Responder 
Grants, they took a 78 percent cut. What does that mean back in the 
hometown or the parish or what have you? It means that 78 percent of 
what the Federal Government would have given to your local government 
to protect the homeland has now been cut, and those dollars are hard to 
find.
  When you look at EPA Clean Water Grants, that has been cut by 21 
percent. When you look at Community Development Block Grants, that has 
been cut by 20 percent. When you look at the Low Income Energy 
Assistance Program, that has been cut by 17 percent.
  I give those examples and I am making those points, Mr. Speaker, to 
say that when you look at $70 billion in Iraq and you look at no-
strings-attached, they seem to be able to get away with what U.S. 
taxpayers and U.S. cities and U.S. mayors and governors cannot get away 
with.

                              {time}  2100

  This past Tuesday, and I mentioned earlier at the top of this hour, I 
had

[[Page H1322]]

the opportunity to go to the opening session of the Florida 
legislature. I heard the House Speaker talk about the deficit in the 
State of Florida, some 4 billion plus dollars that they have to be able 
to fill the gap, because they are not like those of us that are here 
that can be able to take out a high interest credit card and say, let's 
put it on that card, whatever it costs. We will worry about it later, 
but we just need to do it now whatever we feel like doing.
  In the States, they actually have to balance. Constitutionally, they 
have to balance their budget. So that means something has to be taken 
from someone else to fill that gap. And so when you start filling that 
gap, I want to make sure that everyone in America understands that you 
are talking about cutting assistance to seniors, you are talking about 
higher tuition rates in colleges. Even though we cut student loan rates 
here on the Federal end as relates to interest rates, they are going to 
end up seeing higher tuition because they have got to make ends meet. 
You are going to end up seeing many of our youth programs cut. You are 
going to end up seeing many assistance for small businesses at the 
State level cut. They are going to have to find that $4 billion in 
Florida from somewhere.
  So I think it is very, very important, we started looking at this 
whole issue of Iraq and accountability and all of the things that we 
talk about here on the floor. You have got to think about how these 
decisions trickle down to local government. When you start looking at 
the Bush tax cuts for those that are the connected and the wealthy, we 
start looking at that as devolution of taxation. We've cut your taxes 
up here in Washington, blah, blah, blah. You look at the previous 
Republican Congress, oh, this is what we've done. Apparently the 
American people caught on to it and that's why the Democrats are in the 
majority now. It's devolution of taxation.
  What does devolution of taxation mean? It means once you cut 
something here, you're going to have to balance in the local government 
area. So the State government has to cut what it gives to local 
governments and school boards and parishes. And then, when it gets to 
the local government, they're going to have to make cuts to be able to 
fill the gaps, the obligation that the State is not making.
  So when you look at those gaps being filled, I can guarantee you that 
many of my constituents and many of us who know what it means to punch 
in and punch out and have a 15-minute break in the morning and a solid 
half-hour for lunch and if you get a 15-minute break in the afternoon. 
But those individuals that know what that means, then they know that 
they're going to end up getting the short end of the stick, or the 
messy end of the stick as we may say down in Florida.
  I think it is important that people understand what is happening here 
and what is not happening here. What is not happening here is that the 
President is not moving in a responsible way to get us out of Iraq. 
There is great debate as it relates to the Presidential candidates. The 
picture that I showed you of a number of my colleagues on the other 
side of the aisle who stood with the President and said that they will 
not allow him to be overridden and there they are there standing in the 
picture, are standing in the schoolhouse door as it relates to the kind 
of reform that should be happening.
  What is happening here, to give you a report on that, is that there 
is a great attempt to be able to try to bring ourselves back into 
fiscal control as it relates to the budget and start working on 
knocking down this deficit. We are paying more on the debt service than 
we pay on Homeland Security. That is a problem. If the debt service is 
in competition with what we invest in education, that is a problem.
  So when you look at these issues and you look at 2010 and the sunset 
of these Bush tax cuts, when you look at what first responders are not 
getting, 100 percent cut as relates to the COPS program, community-
oriented policing program that many law enforcement officials called 
for and endorse 110 percent; when you look at these issues and you say 
that there is no money, when you have crumbling bridges here in the 
U.S. and you have bridges that are being built in Iraq by U.S. 
contractors and Middle Eastern contractors, you can't help but question 
who is doing the right thing and who is doing the wrong thing. Because, 
I am going to tell you right now, it is not happening. In all of the 
Congressional districts that you look around, I don't see any 
Congressional district saying, Oh, we're happy with what we have. We 
don't need anything else. We don't care about infrastructure and making 
and creating U.S. jobs. We don't care about investment and green collar 
jobs to where if we wanted to put sod on the top of the Capitol 
building, that won't be an overseas job. If someone dropped out of high 
school, they have an opportunity to take part in that. If someone went 
on to college, if someone went on to post-education and became an 
architect and they would have a part in that. Will it build our 
economy? Truck drivers will make money. You will have individuals in 
the agriculture field that will make money and will be able to 
stimulate our economy for real jobs. We would no longer have the 
discussion that took place in Ohio just last night as relates to the 
Presidential primary on who is shipping jobs overseas and who is 
creating jobs on land here in the United States.
  So as we look at that, Mr. Speaker, I think that we should look at it 
from the standpoint that we have to win. The U.S. taxpayer must win. We 
are here to represent that individual. I didn't come to represent 
anybody else on another continent; I came here to represent, not only 
my constituents, but by them voting for me to be here, Mr. Speaker, 
they federalized me to be able to deal with the issues of the United 
States of America and be a part of board of directors of the greatest 
country on the face of the Earth. We want that to continue to be the 
case.
  What we don't want is what we are seeing, the downward spiral, 
irresponsible spending, and the cuts that the Bush White House has said 
that has to be made to be able to carry out a mission in Iraq that has 
no end in sight as far as they are concerned. I think that the American 
people will rise up once again in the upcoming election in saying that 
we are willing to put in the people who are going to put an end to this 
practice.
  I beg my colleagues on the other side of the aisle to please join us, 
those of us on the Democratic side that are trying to find a way to not 
only bring about accountability in Iraq, but bring our men and women 
home so that they can be reunited with their families; so that they can 
actually go to some of the programs that I go to of my kids. I get an 
opportunity to see them. I had an opportunity to have dinner with my 
family this afternoon earlier. I just want them to have that 
opportunity. I want the men and women that serve in uniform to have 
that opportunity. I want that State Department worker that has had to 
volunteer to go to Iraq to have that opportunity. I want that church or 
that synagogue or that mosque to be able to spend that spare time in 
trying to build families versus trying to comfort families of what is 
going on with their loved ones in harm's way. I want that kind of 
America that we are used to seeing.
  Like I said earlier, it is no longer about the fire, it is about 
something else. And I think that it is important that the Members, 
their number one priority should be every day that they hit this floor 
is how they can reunite these families and to be able at the same time 
save the U.S. taxpayer money or their investment. If we can come to the 
floor and put $70 billion like that, and that is without my vote, over 
into Iraq to continue what the President would like to see carried out 
in Iraq, then we should be able to do the same in stimulating our 
economy here domestically and making U.S. families stronger and making 
Americans stronger.
  With that, Mr. Speaker, as usual, the 30-Something Working Group, we 
do want to hear from the Members. I want to make sure that the Members 
share information with us and staff share information with us. You can 
e-mail us at the 30SomethingD[email protected]. That is 
30SomethingD[email protected]. Also, we encourage the Members, and all 
of the charts that we have here are also on www.speaker.gov/
30something.
  I think it is also important to note, Mr. Speaker, that we look 
forward to the coming days as we start to tackle

[[Page H1323]]

these issues every month of this year, I think, leading up until maybe 
about 4 or 5 more months, the Members will have an opportunity to go 
back to their districts for a week and have these district work 
weeks. I encourage all of our constituents to engage us on these issues 
and to continue to keep the pressure on so that we make the right 
decisions here in Washington, DC.

  Mr. Speaker, it was an honor to address the House once again. I yield 
back the balance of my time.

                          ____________________