[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 6 (Wednesday, January 20, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5-S7]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MAKING LEGISLATIVE PROGRESS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, visiting with Nevadans, as I have done
during these past several weeks, it is impossible not to be motivated
to get back to the business of legislating. It is impossible to ignore
their grief over growing foreclosures or the uncertainty of
unemployment or the frustration of fighting insurance companies for
their families' health.
It is just as evident that the people of Nevada and the Nation need
us to work toward sensible solutions rather than drown once again in
the partisan bickering that consumed much of last year.
Some elections go your way; some elections go the other way. It is
the nature of democratic politics in a very diverse Nation. But
regardless of an outcome of an election, as I have said many times, the
American people demand that we work together as partners, not
partisans, to improve their lives. That is as true after Republican
victories as it is after Democratic victories.
In the first half of the 111th Congress, even with the minority's
minimal help,
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we made significant progress. While last year's final few months were
dominated by a debate over health insurance reform that will save
lives, save money, and save Medicare, that historic step was only one
of many accomplishments that we are proud to have passed last year.
We began this Congress determined to strengthen and stabilize the
economy for working families. That is why we immediately cut taxes for
the middle class and small businesses. That is why we immediately
started the Lilly Ledbetter legislation to equalize pay for women in
America. That is why we started the process of creating good-paying
jobs here at home and investing in our future.
Just last week, the White House Council of Economic Advisers found
that as many as 2 million Americans have the stimulus to thank for
their jobs, as does the growing gross domestic product. But there is
more to do, that is for sure.
We protected consumers by cracking down on abusive credit card
companies, and we have been trying to do that for a long time. Last
year, we were able to get it done, finally--to get under control the
abuses credit card companies have been doing to the American people for
so long. We cracked down on mortgage fraud scams, the scams that take
place when times are tough. We changed the law. We rooted out corporate
fraud. But there is more to do.
We started to thaw our frozen credit markets so Americans can get the
loans they need to buy a car, send a child to college, or start a new
business. But there is more to do.
We are helping responsible homeowners keep their homes, and helped
more homeowners to keep the equity in their homes. We helped more
families to buy their first home. A lot of people can claim the idea
for the first-time home buyer tax credit. The idea came, as far as I
know, from Johnny Isakson of Georgia. It was a tremendously important
program that is still going on. We extended that. But even though we
have done that, there is more to do.
We helped millions of children stay healthy by expanding CHIP. We
extended it by about 14 million children who can go to the doctor when
they are sick or to the hospital when they are hurt. We made it easier
by far for these kids to get the help and care they need.
We made it harder for tobacco companies to prey on these children. We
learned, and we have known for some time, that the tobacco habit
starts, most of the time, when you are a teenager. With this
legislation we had been trying to pass for decades, we were finally
able to get it done--to focus on tobacco companies and why there has to
be control placed on them. Even though we have done that, there is more
to do.
We extended unemployment insurance for millions and extended COBRA
subsidies so those struggling to find work can feed their families,
fuel our economy, and afford decent medical care. But there is more to
do.
We supported the travel and tourism industries, which will create
tens of thousands of jobs and cut our deficit by hundreds of millions
of dollars. Even after having done that, there is more to do.
We helped hundreds of thousands of drivers afford more fuel-efficient
cars and trucks. It was such a good idea--cash for clunkers--that now I
heard on the news that Japan is going to do it. That will be a boon for
American car manufacturers because Japan said those Japanese people who
decide to use the Cash for Clunkers Program can buy American cars. Even
though we have done that, there is more to do.
With the national service bill named for Senator Kennedy, we made it
easier for more Americans to serve their country like our heroes of
generations past. With one of the most important conservation bills in
many decades, we protected public lands for generations to come. But
there is more to do.
We have given our troops, veterans, and their families the support
they deserve, including better battlefield equipment, better care for
our wounded warriors, and a well-earned pay raise. We also cut waste
and fraud in the Pentagon's purchase of military weapons. But there is
more to do.
This Congress also made history by pursuing justice and ensuring
equality for every single American. With a hate crimes bill that bears
Emmett Till's name, we stood up for those who were victims of violence
because of their race, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. With the fair
pay bill in Lilly Ledbetter's name, we stood up for those who are
targets of discrimination in the workplace because of their gender or
background.
We passed overdue appropriations bills, new appropriations bills, and
an honest, responsible budget that makes sound investments in every
part of our country. The Senate confirmed President Obama's outstanding
nominee for the Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayor.
It is a long list of accomplishments, but I assure the Senate that we
are just getting started. We have a lot more to do.
In the coming year, we will ensure all Americans can access
affordable health care, and we will deny insurance companies the
ability to deny health care to the sick, and we will slash our deficit
in the process.
We will help more Americans keep their homes and their jobs, and we
will continue to help our economy not only recover but prosper once
again.
We will continue to create new jobs, including good-paying clean
energy jobs that can never be outsourced. You can see throughout the
country that happening. A week ago Monday, 2 days ago, I was in a place
about 35 miles outside of Las Vegas at the Harry Allen plant that is
going to be the most clean natural gas facility for producing
electricity in America. About 700 men and women were working on that
construction project. At that construction project, there were people
walking and running and doing the jobs they needed to do, with trucks
moving back and forth.
The reason we were there is because the Western Area Power
Administration, WAPA, under the stimulus bill we passed, had the
ability to do loans that were very low-interest loans. We were there to
announce a public-private partnership between WAPA and others, which
will bring electricity from the northern part of the State to the
southern part of Nevada for the first time in Nevada's history.
We became a State in 1864. Why is that important? It will allow
Nevada to be energy independent in 2\1/2\ to 3 years. Just as
important, we also will be able to produce far more electricity than
Nevada needs because now, with this power line that will create
hundreds and hundreds of jobs, we will also have a lot of energy
projects for that full 250-mile area. They will be able to do solar,
wind, geothermal and bring that onto the power line. That is only the
first phase. After that, it has been agreed by WAPA that they can do
stage 2, which will bring electricity from the Northwest into Nevada
and, of course, California and the whole Southwest. That is a good
project and an example of good-paying clean energy jobs that can never
be outsourced.
We will tackle our daunting energy and climate challenges, and by
doing that we will strengthen our national security, our environment,
and our economy.
We need to look no further than Boone Pickens, who talks about this
every day of his life. We will have a more secure Nation, and we will
lessen our dependence on foreign oil. We will use the resources we
have, among which are wind, Sun, geothermal, and now we are the largest
holder of natural gas of any country in the world. That is what Boone
Pickens is talking about--using our own energy, not continuing
importing oil.
As we do all these things, we will continue to leave a seat at the
table for our Republican colleagues. Whether their caucus comprises 40
or 41 members, each composes this body of 100. Our individual
caucuses--one that will have 59 and one that will have 41--should all
be united within the walls of this Chamber and not defined by the aisle
that divides the desks.
Today is the first anniversary of the first time our President
addressed our Nation as our President. One year ago today, standing on
steps just a short distance from here, he reflected that our Nation had
chosen ``unity of purpose over conflict and discord.'' He asked us to
put aside the differences and dogmas that paralyze our politics.
We can answer that call this year--not just because President Obama
requested it but because the American people justly demand it.
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By and large, those in the minority have shown, so far, far too
little interest in working with us. More important, they have shown far
too little interest in working on the interests of their constituents.
Mr. President, I called my office early this morning and asked my
faithful assistant, Janice Shelton, to arrange a call for me to talk to
the new, soon-to-be Senator from Massachusetts, Scott Brown. I look
forward to visiting with him. I look forward to welcoming him to the
Senate and asking him that he work with us. It is certainly a
conversation I look forward to.
I hope in this new year we will resolve to leave partisan political
motivation behind. I hope we will share and renew the motivation to get
to work, to legislate for the good of this country.
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