[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 85 (Tuesday, June 8, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4630-S4642]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN JOBS AND CLOSING TAX LOOPHOLES ACT OF 2010
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I ask that the Chair lay before the
Senate a message from the House with respect to H.R. 4213.
The Acting President pro tempore laid before the Senate the following
message from the House of Representatives:
Resolved, That the House agrees to the amendment of the
Senate to the bill (H.R. 4213) entitled ``An Act to amend the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend certain expiring
provisions, and for other purposes,'' with the House
amendment to the Senate amendment.
Motion to Concur with Amendment No. 4301
(Purpose: In the nature of a substitute)
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I move to concur in the House amendment
to the Senate amendment to the House bill with an amendment which I
send to the desk.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will report the
amendment.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Montana [Mr. Baucus] proposes an amendment
numbered 4301 to the House amendment to the Senate amendment
to H.R. 4213.
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading
of the amendment be waived.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
(The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of
Amendments.'')
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, a few moments ago, the Republican leader
sought once again to throw mud at the new health care law that Congress
enacted earlier this year. Let me take a moment to set the record
straight.
The Republican leader said the premiums would go up for some
Americans. What the Republican leader did not say is the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office found that health care reform would lower
premiums for the overwhelming majority of Americans. After taking into
account the tax credits to help buy insurance, health insurance will
cost less for 9 out of 10 Americans--no small amount.
The Republican leader mocked the new payments to seniors the
President is highlighting today; that is, the $250 for drug benefits.
The President made the point that that is important for seniors. The
truth is, seniors will welcome the help they will soon be receiving to
pay for prescription drugs in their coverage gap, the so-called
doughnut hole. Starting very soon seniors will receive $250 to help pay
for their prescriptions. By the time health care reform is fully phased
in, we will have completely eliminated the doughnut hole. This is
something seniors care about very much.
No longer will seniors have to choose between their rent and the
prescriptions they need. No longer will seniors have to cut their pills
in half just to get by. No longer will seniors live in unnecessary pain
just because of drug costs. So the fact is, health care reform will
help to control the costs in health care. Health care reform will
reduce costs for the taxpayer over the decades to come. That is not my
assertion, it is that of the Congressional Budget Office. Health care
reform will increase access to lifesaving medical treatments for
millions of Americans who all too often now must do without.
Madam President, on the matter before us today, 15 million Americans
have lost their jobs during this great recession. Although the
unemployment rate came down some last month, it remains near 10
percent. At the depth of the great recession, during the first months
of last year, the economy lost an average of 750,000 jobs a month. That
is practically the population of my State. We have come a long way
since then. Even if we exclude temporary census jobs, in the first 5
months of this year the economy has created nearly half a million new
jobs. But we still have a lot more to do. We have to get more Americans
back to work.
We began doing just that with the Recovery Act. We enacted that as
one
[[Page S4631]]
of the first things the new Congress did in February of last year.
According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the Recovery
Act increased by between 1.2 million and 2.8 million the number of
Americans employed.
We continued getting more Americans back to work with the Hiring
Incentives Act that we enacted in March of this year. The HIRE Act
should help to bolster job creation in coming months.
We are continuing again today with the American Jobs and Closing Tax
Loopholes Act. This bill would create jobs by improving our Nation's
infrastructure. It would reduce the cost to local governments to build
roads, bridges, and water treatment facilities that would create jobs.
This bill would also extend provisions that expire at the end of May.
These provisions would provide important relief for many Americans.
Americans who are out of work are depending on our job creation
efforts. This bill extends the needed lifeline of unemployment benefits
to more than 5 million Americans who would not be able to support
themselves or their families without this help.
We are talking about people who have worked, want to work, and will
work again. These are our neighbors. And they need our help.
In my home State of Montana, we have seen some promising signs of
recovery. In Yellowstone County, unemployment is down from 6 percent in
March to 5.2 pesent in April. That is good news. But there still remain
people who need our help.
Some counties in Montana have unemployment as high as 16.8 percent.
In Montana, as with the rest of country, we have seen an increase in
people looking for work.
Unemployment rates will continue to hover around 10 percent even as
the economy improves. As the economy adds jobs, many unemployed people
grow more hopeful and resume their search for work. That is one reason
why economists call unemployment a lagging economic indicator.
The bill that we are considering today includes improvements to the
unemployment insurance program. This bill would eliminate the penalty
in unemployment insurance for getting part-time or temporary work.
Under current law, if people who are unemployed take part-time or
temporary jobs, and then lose that job, they receive lower benefits
than people who did not take short-term work. This bill corrects that
inequity.
This bill also expands the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community
College and Career Training Program. The bill would broaden the program
to include workers who are eligible for unemployment insurance. This
will help more Americans who are looking for work to get the education
and looking career training that they need.
If we do not pass this bill, doctors who see Medicare and TRICARE
patients will take a 21 percent pay cut. More and more physicians are
threatening to leave the Medicare and TRICARE programs if this happens.
Seniors and military families could lose access to their doctors.
We cannot keep postponing this issue every month or two. Seniors
worry they will lose their doctors. And physicians cannot run a
business with this much uncertainty.
We need to pass a long-term reform. I would life to fix the problem
permanently. But the votes are not there today. We will permanently
reform Medicare's system to compensate doctors as soon as we can.
In the meantime, this bill provides security to doctors and the
patients they see for the next year and a half through 2011. It
provides a modest payment increase to physicians for the rest of this
year and next year.
This multi-year provision would prevent the untenable cut in
physician payments. And this bill would provide a pathway to a
permanent change in how doctors are paid.
The budget rules have to score a permanent reform as a cost. But we
all know that this is something that we have to do for America's
seniors, military families, and doctors.
This bill would also provide tax relief for American families and
businesses. This bill would help communities that have suffered a
natural disaster. And this bill includes important tax incentives to
improve America's energy independence.
For individuals and families, this bill provides much-needed tax
relief in a time of economic uncertainty.
This bill would extend the teacher expense deduction for teachers who
buy school supplies for their classrooms. And it would extend the
qualified tuition deduction to help with college costs.
This bill would extend much-needed relief for communities that have
suffered from natural disasters.
And it would extend important business tax provisions to help create
jobs and make our companies competitive in a global economy.
The bill would extend the research and development credit to help
businesses to continue to be on the cutting edge.
The bill would also extend important energy tax incentives. For
example, the bill would extend the dollar-per-gallon credit for
biodiesel and renewable diesel. And the bill would extend the
manufacturer's credit for the construction of new energy-efficient
homes.
In addition to these important provisions that provide direct
assistance in job creation, the bill includes other proposals that will
provide relief for businesses and individuals.
One such provision is pension funding relief.
With the weak economy, American employers are faced with the need to
make higher pension contributions. Several factors have combined to
require these higher contributions.
There is the funding changes of the Pension Protection Act of 2006.
There is the slide in the stock market in 2008.
And then there is the ensuing great recession.
These requirements for higher contributions are coming upon employers
just when they are facing lower asset values and lower cash flow.
Meeting the new funding rules could divert resources that employers
could use to keep workers on the payroll.
We addressed this bind temporarily in 2008. But employers are still
facing the prospect of closing plants and stores. Employers are still
faced with the possibility of letting workers go in order to make up
for lost asset values.
This bill contains additional temporary, targeted, and appropriate
relief for these employers. And at the same time, the bill still
maintains the pension security system.
These tough economic times have hit the States hard, as well. In last
month's employment report, for example, State and local governments cut
22,000 jobs.
So, included in the substitute amendment is a 6-month extension of
the additional Federal financial assistance for State Medicaid
programs. This would allow States to plan for their next fiscal year
with the greater certainty.
Additional Federal Medicaid match money, known as FMAP, helps the
economy grow. According to the economist Mark Zandi, this funding has a
return on investment of about $1.40 for every dollar invested.
The nation's governors have repeatedly asked for an extension of this
Federal assistance. And this bill answers their pleas.
With so many Americans out of work, our country needs Congress to
enact this legislation.
This bill continues valuable tax incentives to families and
businesses that will help them in these difficult economic times. And
the bill sustains vital safety-net programs that will also help foster
economic growth.
This legislation is important to the American people. It would
prevent millions of Americans from falling through the safety net. It
would extend vital programs that are set to expire. It would put cash
in the hands of Americans who would spend it quickly, boosting economic
demand. And it would extend critical programs and tax incentives that
create jobs.
And so, let us help America's businesses to create more jobs. Let us
join together to work across the aisle on this common-sense
legislation. Let us enact these tax incentives and safety-net
provisions into law.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
[[Page S4632]]
Mr. ALEXANDER. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Health Care Reform
Mr. ALEXANDER. Madam President, I get a fair amount of mail. I
received the other day a nice envelope from the Department of Health
and Human Services addressed to Andrew L. Alexander, Jr., in my
Nashville residence, with a nice brochure here: Medicare and the New
Health Care Law; What It Means to You.
I am one of those 40 million Americans who is 65 or older, so I am a
part of Medicare. I was very interested to read the brochure, because I
spent a lot of time, as did the Senator from New Hampshire, and the
Senator from Montana probably spent even more, on the new health care
law.
As I read through this brochure, it did not bear very much
relationship to the way I understood the law I voted on Christmas Eve
at the end of last year when we passed this health care law.
This brochure, which has been mailed at taxpayer expense to more than
40 million Americans, is an attempt by the administration to explain
that the health care law does what it does not do or does not do what
it does. Let me be specific about why I say that. Throughout the
debate, those of us on the Republican side of the aisle said the health
care law would cut Medicare, raise premiums, raise taxes, pass Medicaid
costs on to States, and add to our national debt. Those on the other
side said we were wrong. Since they had the votes, they passed the
bill. It is now law. But let me take two or three examples from the
mail I got the other day. The brochure claims, in the first paragraph,
that the new health care law will result in ``increased quality health
care.'' Well, that would mean, to me, I would think, as I read that,
that I, an individual on Medicare, or that any individual in the United
States, would continue to have at least the coverage I am having today
and hopefully more.
Yet Medicare's own Chief Actuary noted in an April 22 memorandum that
without intervening legislation to correct a payment cut in the new
law, some providers would ``end their participation in the program''--
that is Medicare--with the effect of ``possibly jeopardizing access for
beneficiaries.''
It looks to me if you want to be accurate in writing 40 million
Americans about what is happening with Medicare, you would add that in
there and say there is another view by the Chief Actuary of Medicare in
the Obama administration.
The Chief Actuary also concluded that 15 percent of Part A
providers--we mean by that hospitals, skilled nursing facilities,
hospices, home health agencies--may be unable to sustain their
operation in the next 10 years as a result of drastic Medicare cuts in
the new law. That does not sound like ``increased quality health care''
to me.
No. 2, the second paragraph of the brochure says: The new health care
law will keep Medicare strong and solvent.
Here is the truth, at least as we see it. The $529 billion in cuts to
Medicare--no one disputes that we have those--are being used to pay for
a $1 trillion--when fully implemented over 10 years--health care bill,
not to shore up Medicare.
According to the same people who put out this brochure, the CMS Chief
Actuary, you cannot double-count the Medicare cuts as both paying for
expanding the health care delivery system and increasing the solvency
of the program. I mean, common sense says if you take $529 billion out
of Medicare over the first 10 years, or $1 trillion out of Medicare
over 10 years, when it is fully implemented, and you spend almost all
of that on something other than Medicare, that is not the way to make
Medicare more solvent, even if it is a new Medicare Program. Any
savings from Medicare, we believe, ought to be spent on Medicare,
rather than running up the fiscal deficit in Medicare.
No. 3, on the second page, the brochure says if you are in a Medicare
Advantage plan, you will still receive guaranteed Medicare benefits.
This is one of the most disingenuous comments in the brochure. If you
read that and are one of the more than 11 million people on Medicare
Advantage, you would think: My Medicare Advantage must be OK. The truth
is, Medicare Advantage plans will have less generous benefit packages,
according to the CMS, the group that puts this out, according to the
Chief Actuary. He says it will result in less generous benefit
packages. The Congressional Budget Office Director Doug Elmendorf
testified that fully half the benefits currently provided to seniors
under Medicare Advantage would disappear under the proposal in the
earlier bills offered by the Senator from Montana, which were virtually
the same as this bill.
Here is the difference. They will come back and say: But we said
``guaranteed benefits.'' They would be right about that. But guaranteed
Medicare benefits are what everybody has. If one wants Medicare
Advantage, which they pay a little more for to cover dental, vision,
and hearing, or other extra benefits, that is why they buy Medicare
Advantage. The truth is, the Medicare cuts in the health care law will
limit plan choices and reduce benefits for almost 11 million seniors
enrolled in Medicare Advantage on those extra benefits. That is
relatively one-fourth of all seniors in Medicare, and there are 40
million of us in Medicare. In my State of Tennessee, there are nearly a
quarter of a million on Medicare Advantage who will lose those
benefits. So it is not true--or at least it is disingenuous--that
benefits will not change. Guaranteed benefits won't, but extra benefits
likely will.
Finally, it says the new law preserves and strengthens Medicare. That
is also disingenuous, because the new law does not include paying
doctors who serve Medicare patients proper compensation. We call this
the sustainable growth rate, the SGR. Some people call it the doc-fix.
One would think a comprehensive health care law would include proper
compensation for doctors who serve Medicare patients, but it does not.
Why? It would have, according to the President's budget, added $371
billion to the cost of the bill and made it add to the debt, which we
said it would.
So what did we do instead? We simply passed a health care law, the
majority did, and claimed it doesn't add to the debt, expand the health
care delivery system--which we all know costs too much already--and
went on our way. And we still have with us the big cut in payments to
doctors which will increasingly create, for those on Medicare, a sort
of health care bridge to nowhere or to the emergency room, as we find
Americans who are on the big government programs, Medicare and
Medicaid, unable, in the case of Medicaid or Medicare, to find doctors
who are willing to serve them at the lower rates and, in the case of
those who go to Walgreens in Washington State, a drugstore company that
won't fill present description drugs for Medicaid patients because of
the low rates.
I am disappointed that the administration, in its effort to make the
health care law sound better, would send out what amounts to
propaganda. There is a Federal law against propaganda. It says annual
appropriations can't be used for publicity or propaganda purposes
within the United States. I know a little about that. When I was
Education Secretary in 1991 and 1992, I sent out what I thought was a
very carefully written article to teachers about President Bush's, the
first, education program, and the Democrats in Congress hauled me up
before the committee and had the General Accounting Office investigate
me and castigated me for putting out publicity and propaganda in
violation of the law. Some House Members have written the General
Accounting Office and said this violates the law. I don't know whether
it violates the law, but it doesn't tell the truth in the way we
Medicare beneficiaries deserve to have the truth told to us about what
the health care law does. I am disappointed in it. I hope the Center
for Medicare and Medicaid Services will be more accurate in the future
and present a more balanced characterization of the law. I am sure
during the rest of this year there will be a great many Americans who
will take a closer look at the law and agree with Republicans who said
no to this because it will raise premiums, raise taxes, and it will
send new costs to States and will cut Medicare.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Montana.
[[Page S4633]]
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, it is with interest that I listened to
my colleague from Tennessee for several reasons. One, he is debating a
law that has already passed. It is strange to me that he wants to
relitigate health care reform. But it is not so strange because I know
that that is the tack the other side is going to be taking for the rest
of this year. At every opportunity, Senators on the other side of the
aisle, all of whom voted against health care reform, will sow the seeds
of doubt in the minds of the American people. They don't come up with
constructive ideas on how to improve the work of something that has
already passed into law. Rather, they stand on the law and tear down
something that has passed, sowing the seeds of doubt with
misinformation.
It is unfortunate, because it has caused the American people to
wonder who they can trust, especially when one side only speaks ill of
a major program such as health care rather than trying to come up with
constructive ideas. That is what is happening right now. We heard a
statement from a Senator who is trying to basically score points in the
November elections by sowing the seeds of doubt and confusion over
health care reform.
The truth is not what the Senator just said. The Senator from
Tennessee takes issue with efforts of the government to explain the new
health care law. He is implying that it is disingenuous, that it is not
fair, that it is one-sided. I remind all my colleagues that when the
drug benefit came out, proposed by the administration of a different
political philosophy, they didn't pay for it--all unpaid for, every red
cent. They put all kinds of literature out, all kinds of brochures to
tout the drug benefit. There were some who thought it wasn't fair.
There were some who thought it was biased. I will not litigate that
issue, but I do know that charge was made many times when the
administration of a different political persuasion was touting the drug
benefit legislation that passed not too long ago.
I have spoken with this administration several times about getting
the proper information out; that is, not to tilt, gild the lily, bias.
At hearings I have made that clear to administration officials. I for
one do not want this administration or any administration to be unfair
in explaining the program to the American people. I think the brochure
the Senator talks about is fair and straightforward. I just happened to
pull up the Web site yesterday and looked at it to see what it said. I
was impressed. There is a lot of information there I didn't know about.
It didn't at all come across to me, trying to be objective and fair, as
one-sided. It was an honest effort to explain to the American people
what health care reform is.
The new law takes steps to improve the quality of health care. Let me
go back to what the Senator said. No. 1, he took issue with the
paragraph that said the new law increases the quality of health care.
Of course, the new law increases the quality of health care. The
Senator from Tennessee is sowing the seeds of doubt as to whether this
new law actually does increase the quality of health care. Let me
explain how it does. First, there is delivery system reform. We get rid
of a lot of the waste in the American health care system. It is paid on
the basis of quality, not on the basis of quantity and volume. Every
expert who has looked at the American health care system knows we have
to move in this direction. This bill does that. It is going to
reimburse doctors, hospitals, and health care providers more on the
basis of quality outcomes than on the basis of the number of services
provided or the quantity of services.
The doughnut hole will be filled. That will increase the quality of
health care for seniors. The statement that the Senator refers to from
the HHS Actuary actually says that health care reform will extend the
life of the Medicare trust fund for another decade. I think that
improves the quality of health care. Anyone who objectively has looked
at the health care reform legislation and attempted to determine one
issue; that is, the life of the Medicare trust fund, has concluded that
the passage of health care reform will extend the life of the Medicare
trust fund for 8 to 10 years. That clearly gives seniors a little peace
of mind. It is going to be there. It gives peace of mind to people who
are about to be seniors, that it is going to be there. That is a major
improvement in quality.
It is true what the brochure says. It does increase the quality of
health care. There is no doubt about it. Anyone who thinks otherwise
should think through the entire legislation and be objective about it.
No. 2, he refers to the assertion that it keeps Medicare strong and
solvent and claims that is not true. The Actuary says that health care
reform will extend the life of the Medicare trust fund for another
decade. That is 100 percent refuted.
Third, the Senator from Tennessee quibbles with the assertion that
Medicare Advantage beneficiaries will continue to receive their
guaranteed benefits. The Senator at first admits this is true, but the
larger point is that health care reform reduces overpayment to Medicare
Advantage plans. And why should other beneficiaries pay extra for the
overpayments made to some people who are beneficiaries of Medicare
Advantage plans? I have talked to a lot of executives who work for
Medicare Advantage plans in the last week or so. They are interested,
and they like it. They like the change in the law. Why? Because they
know they are going to be reimbursed now more on the basis of quality.
Medicare Advantage plans will be paid more if they can show better
outcomes, higher quality, not just the standard ``you get the same
rate'' benchmark compared with fee for service and so forth. A CEO of a
major Medicare Advantage plan said: Senator, we think that is good
policy. We like that. We are ready. We are anxious. We want to do a
real good job. We think that is a good change in the law. That is going
to, frankly, help seniors--higher quality, better benefits under
Medicare Advantage plans. That will help.
Essentially, I want to make it clear, the Senator from Tennessee
complains the health care law did not correct for payment of doctors.
Here is his opportunity. He could vote for this bill today. If he
doesn't want doctors to take a 21-percent cut, if he doesn't want that,
he should vote for this bill. This bill before us today would prevent
that cut from taking place.
I very much look forward to seeing the Senator from Tennessee voting
for this bill so that doctors do not get a cut in their payment. That
would be the right thing to do, support this bill so doctors don't get
cut.
Again, the Senator takes issue with the assertion that health care
reform would help keep Medicare solvent. The fact is, the nonpartisan
Medicare Actuary said health care reform will extend the life of the
Medicare trust fund for a decade longer.
I return to my first point: The health care reform law has passed.
The President signed it. My gosh, why don't we work together
constructively, both sides, with good points, praise, criticism, both
sides of the aisle, all constructively to help the American people? Why
are we here? We are here to help the American people. We are not here
to score political points. We are the hired hands. We are the
employees. We work for the American people. The American people want
good health care reform. They want costs lower, and they want higher
quality care. So let us work together to help the American people get
that. That is what we should be doing here, not trying to score
political points and cause disruptions for the American people for the
upcoming elections in November.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Udall of New Mexico). The Senator from
Florida is recognized.
Mr. LeMIEUX. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Venezuela
Mr. LeMIEUX. Mr. President, I am here again today to talk about my
concerns that are emerging from the problems we are seeing in
Venezuela.
Last May 25--just a couple weeks ago--I wrote a letter to the
Secretary of State, Secretary Clinton, that was signed by 11 of my
colleagues and myself. Senator Ensign from Nevada and I wrote this
letter together, and we were
[[Page S4634]]
welcome to have 10 other Senators join in the letter to Secretary
Clinton to speak about our concern--in fact, what we would call a
gathering storm of concern--about the country of Venezuela.
The letter seeks to have a review by the Secretary of State and the
Department of State as to whether Venezuela should be added to the list
of states that we consider state sponsors of terror. The letter goes
through a number of issues I have spoken about on the floor before
concerning some very questionable behavior by Hugo Chavez and
Venezuela.
One of the issues it talks about is the support of Venezuela for the
narcoterrorists in Colombia, the FARC. Evidence has come forward that
Venezuela's weapons have found their way into the hands of these
narcoterrorists.
Another of the things we talk about in the letter is the concern with
a plot that was revealed by a Spanish judge in March of this past
year--a plot to assassinate President Uribe in Colombia, where the
Spanish judge has accused Venezuela of being behind that plot, along
with a Spanish terrorist group called the ETA.
The letter also speaks about Hezbollah's activities in Venezuela--
Hezbollah, the Middle Eastern terrorist group, supported by Iran.
The letter also speaks of the troubling new information that for at
least 3 years Venezuela and Iran have been putting factories together
in remote areas of eastern Venezuela, which is the area believed to be
rich in uranium.
In December of 2008, Turkish customs authorities caught one of these
joint companies, literally called VenIran--``Ven'' for Venezuela--a
``tractor factory,'' attempting to smuggle 22 containers of explosive
materials labeled as ``tractor parts.''
Since 2007, we have pointed out, there have been direct flights
between Caracas, Venezuela, and Tehran, Iran, without proper controls
or customs verifications.
We have also pointed out in the letter there are increasing
paramilitary Iranian forces operating in Venezuela.
We know from recent reports from the IAEA, the International Atomic
Energy Agency, that Iran now looks to have the nuclear fuel which will
give them the capability to build nuclear weapons. We have had open
testimony in front of the Armed Services Committee that within 3 to 5
years Iran may have the intercontinental ballistic capability to
deliver those weapons across the ocean and put the United States in
jeopardy.
But Venezuela is a lot closer. There is no need for an ICBM from
Venezuela. In fact, a flight from Venezuela to Florida is about the
same length in time as a flight from Florida to Washington, DC.
So we brought this letter to the attention of Secretary Clinton in
May. We wrote this letter on May 25, 2010.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that this letter be printed in
the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC, May 25, 2010.
Hon. Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Secretary of State, U.S. Department of State, Washington, DC.
Dear Secretary Clinton: We are deeply concerned about
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez' growing ties with U.S.-
designated foreign terrorist organizations and state sponsors
of terrorism. This letter is to present you with a number of
questions that we believe should be thoroughly addressed
within the Department of State's 2009 Country Report on
Terrorism which was due to Congress on April 30, 2010. We
realize that thorough answers to some of these questions may
require a classified annex.
PRESIDENT CHAVEZ' SUPPORT OF FARC
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is South
America's oldest and best armed terrorist group. As pointed
out in the 2008 Country Report on Terrorism, the FARC is
notorious for carrying out a full range of terrorist
activities to include kidnappings, murders, mortar attacks,
hijackings, and bombings against Colombian political,
military, and economic targets.
On March 1, 2008, a Colombian military strike against a
FARC camp in Ecuadorian territory successfully killed senior
FARC members, including Luis Edgar Devia Silva (aka Raul
Reyes). Silva was a known terrorist responsible for numerous
atrocities within Colombia, and his death and the subsequent
capture of his computer laptop provided a treasure trove of
intelligence. Chavez mourned the loss of Reyes and eulogized
this terrorist as a ``good revolutionary'' while amassing
troops on the Colombian border in an attempt to intimidate
his Latin American neighbor.
In light of what the U.S. government has discovered from
the ``Reyes'' documents and other sources, we ask that the
annual terrorism report provide attention to the following
questions:
What does the information found on Reyes' computer reveal
with regard to the depth of the relationship and support that
the FARC receives from high-ranking officials in the Chavez
government? Based on information gleaned from the laptop,
what type of surface-to-air missiles or man-portable air
defense systems (MANPADs) has Venezuela provided to the FARC
or enabled the FARC to obtain, and what threat do those
systems pose to Colombia and U.S. counterdrug efforts in the
region?
In September 2008, the U.S. Department of the Treasury's
Office of Foreign Assets Control designated two senior
Venezuelan Intelligence officials, Hugo Armando Carvajal
Barrios and Henry de Jesus Rangel Silva, and one former
senior security official, Ramon Rodriguez Chacin, for
materially assisting the FARC's illicit activities.
What types of weapons have these three senior Venezuelan
government officials enabled the FARC to acquire? To what
extent does the FARC use proceeds from illicit drug
trafficking to acquire weapons from the Venezuelan
government?
In late July 2009, the government of Sweden requested an
explanation from Venezuela about how the FARC obtained
Swedish-made anti-tank rocket launchers that had been sold to
Venezuela in the 1980s. Three of the launchers, matched by
their serial numbers, were recovered from a captured FARC
arms cache in October 2008.
Do we have the intelligence resources in place to properly
monitor the flow of guns and money from Venezuela to the
FARC? Are known FARC officials, such as Rodrigo Granda, Marin
Arango (aka Ivan Marquez), and Rodrigo London Echeverry (aka
Timochenko or Timoleon Jiminez) able to operate and move
freely within Venezuela?
Do you agree with Director of National Intelligence (DNI)
Dennis Blair's March 2009 testimony before the Senate Armed
Services Committee in which he stated that despite setbacks
brought about by the Colombian government's tireless efforts
``the FARC leadership has shown no signs it seeks to end
hostilities or participate in serious peace talks'' and
further, that the FARC benefits from cross-border sanctuaries
in Venezuela?
It is well known that cocaine trafficking funds FARC
operations. The United Nations World Drug Report for 2009
revealed that nearly one-third of all cocaine produced in the
Andean region passes through Venezuela. To what extent does
the Venezuelan government's involvement in the international
drug trade allow for millions of dollars to flow into the
coffers of narco-terrorists?
Recently, the Treasury Department, in an unprecedented
move, labeled an active foreign military official as an
international drug ``kingpin'' for enabling massive shipments
of cocaine from Venezuela into West Africa. Americans are now
banned from doing business with Ibraima Pap Camara, the Air
Force Chief of Staff in Guinea Bissau and the former head of
Guinea-Bissau's Navy and Jose Americo Bubo Na Tchuto, and any
assets the two might have had in the United States are now
frozen.
To what extent are drugs from Venezuela flowing into West
Africa, and what impact does that have on political
corruption, drug smuggling, and terrorist operations in the
region? Should President Chavez be held accountable under the
Kingpin Act for his role in the flow of drugs to the rest of
the world?
How much do terrorist groups such as Al-Qaida in the
Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) profit from trafficking drugs that
originate in or flow through Venezuela? What specific steps
is the United States taking to cooperate effectively with
countries in South America, North Africa, and the Sahel to
blunt the trafficking of drugs across the Atlantic and into
West Africa?
HEZBOLLAH'S ACTIVITIES IN VENEZUELA
Prior to September 11, 2001, no terrorist group had killed
more Americans than Lebanon-based Hezbollah. On June 18,
2008, the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets
Control announced that it was freezing the U.S. assets of two
Venezuelan based supporters of Hezbollah--Ghazi Nasr al Din
(a Chavez employed ``diplomat'') and Fawzi Kan'an for
providing direct support to Hezbollah. According to the
Department of Treasury, these two individuals were involved
in the planning of Hezbollah operations, including terrorist
attacks and kidnappings.
What is your assessment of the presence and activities of
Hezbollah inside Venezuela? What is your assessment of the
purpose and implications of a meeting in Beirut on or about
February 1, 2010, between Adel El Zabayar and Imad Saab,
deputies of the Venezuelan National Assembly, and Nawaf
Musawi, director of international relations of Hezbollah?
On November 3, 2009, our Israeli allies stopped the cargo
ship MV Francop before it could reach its destination in
Syria, which is a state sponsor of terrorism. The Francop was
loaded with 36 shipping containers holding 500 tons of
Katyusha rockets, mortars, grenades, and a half-million
rounds of small-arms ammunition suspected to be bound for
Hezbollah.
Is there information confirming that the Francop had
stopped in the Venezuelan port of Guanta before sailing for
Syria and at the
[[Page S4635]]
same time that Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro was
in Damascus visiting with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad?
Are there any indications of a substantial Iranian security
presence in Guanta?
PRESIDENT CHAVEZ SUPPORT FOR STATE SPONSORS OF TERRORISM
In addition to his documented support for Hezbollah and the
FARC, President Chavez has closely aligned himself with Cuba
and Iran, both of which are already on the State Sponsors of
Terrorism List.
Venezuela's financial support for state sponsors of
terrorism is evident by Chavez's extensive support of the
Castro regime in Cuba, which is calculated to amount to $1
billion a year. To what extent does Venezuelan assistance to
the Cuban regime facilitate the regime's ongoing repression
of the pro-democracy movement and forestall a transition to
democracy in Cuba? How deeply are Cuban advisors involved in
the intelligence and security apparatus of the Venezuelan
government?
What is your assessment of the role of long-term Castro
confidant Ramiro Valdez as a special advisor to the
government of Venezuela and the impact it will have on pro-
democracy leaders and movements in Venezuela? What role, if
any, did Valdez play in the recent purge of over 100
Venezuelan military officers?
With respect to Iran, President Chavez has repeatedly
expressed support for that country's covert nuclear program
and announced in September 2009 a plan for the construction
of a ``nuclear village'' in Venezuela with Iranian
assistance.
In your judgment, to what extent is Venezuela supporting
Iran's covert nuclear enrichment program development? What is
the current state of Venezuela's nuclear program, and to what
extent is Iran providing nuclear knowhow to Venezuela? Under
the present conditions, does Venezuelan-Iranian nuclear
cooperation violate the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and
United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency protocols?
We have seen reports of suspicious Venezuelan-Iranian
companies sprouting in remote areas of Venezuela, including
the VenIran ``tractor factory.'' In December 2008, Turkish
customs inspectors intercepted 22 shipping containers bound
for VenIran that were labeled ``tractor parts'' but instead
contained an ``explosives lab'' and chemicals that could be
used to manufacture explosives. What is your assessment of
the activities carried out by VenIran? Is it possible that
its facilities are a front for illicit, possibly even
nuclear, technology-related activities?
Congress is close to authorizing a comprehensive set of
sanctions aimed at restricting Iranian access to refined
fuels in a bid to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
At the same time, Iran has a growing financial presence in
Venezuela, and President Chavez has pledged to provide Iran
with 20,000 barrels of gasoline per day.
To what extent are Venezuela's financial institutions
assisting the Iranian nuclear enrichment program? Are you
concerned about the activities of the Venezuelan Banco
Internacional de Desarrollo and the Banco Binacional Irani-
Venezolano? To what extent could Venezuela's financial
institutions and energy resources help Iran undermine
bilateral or international sanctions designed to stop its
covert nuclear program?
The 2008 Country Report on Terrorism confirmed that Iran
and Venezuela continued weekly flights connecting Tehran,
Syria, and Caracas and that passengers on these flights were
only subject to ``cursory immigration and customs controls.''
What is the U.S. government's understanding of the number of
passengers and nature of their travel as well as the type of
cargo transported on these flights? Is the Administration
concerned that these flights are being used for nefarious
purposes?
On April 21, the Secretary of Defense issued a report
regarding the current and future military strategy of Iran.
The report states that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps-Qods Force maintains world-wide operational
capabilities and that ``recent years have witnessed an
increased presence in Latin America, particularly
Venezuela.''
What threat does the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods
Force presence in Venezuela pose to the United States and our
interests in Latin America? What if any measures is the
Administration taking to verify the extent of terrorism
activities in Venezuelan territory? How is the Administration
ensuring that all appropriate branches of the U.S. government
are aware of these key findings?
IMPLICATIONS OF ADDING VENEZUELA TO THE STATE SPONSORS OF TERRORISM
LIST
The State Department currently designates four nations--
Syria, Cuba, Sudan, and Iran--as state sponsors of terrorism.
These countries provide ideological support and material
assistance to terrorist groups. Once you consider the
evidence behind Venezuela's substantial ties with U.S.-
designated terrorist organizations and state sponsors of
terrorism, we would like to know the strategic implications
of designating Venezuela a state sponsor of terrorism. We
would also like to know the implications for the integrity of
this list if Venezuela continues to evade designation.
Looking into the future--and short of designating Venezuela
a `State Sponsor of Terrorism'--what other concrete measures
are available to curb President Chavez' threatening ties with
terrorist groups and state sponsors of terrorism? Under what
conditions would the Administration apply such measures? Does
the U.S. government have a contingency plan to respond to a
sudden and prolonged unavailability of Venezuelan oil exports
to the United States?
Given that Chavez is expected to receive a $20 billion loan
from the Chinese Government and his government has just
signed yet another multi-billion dollar arms deal with Russia
for weapons that far exceed any rational analysis of
Venezuela's national defense requirements--it is clear that
this is the time to revisit our polices within the region. We
encourage you to work with all appropriate federal agencies
in obtaining thorough answers to these questions. We look
forward to further discussions about what steps the
Administration plans to take in order to address these
disturbing developments within our hemisphere.
Sincerely,
John Ensign,
George S. LeMieux,
James M. Inhofe,
Jon Kyl,
John McCain,
James E. Risch,
Roger F. Wicker,
Sam Brownback,
Jim Bunning,
Scott Brown,
Robert F. Bennett,
John Cornyn.
Mr. LeMIEUX. We hope to receive a response from the Department of
State. I know firsthand that Secretary Clinton is focused on Latin
America. I have spoken to her on several occasions. I know she knows we
need to do a better job promoting democracy in Latin America. She
shares that concern. We have had those conversations.
For too long, Latin America has been neglected by the United States
in our diplomatic relations. For a variety of reasons, some of them
with good merit, we have been focusing to the east. But we cannot
neglect our friends in Central and South America. We cannot neglect our
friends in Colombia, for example, or in Panama. That is why I have come
to the floor on several occasions and called for the ratification of
the free-trade agreements between our country and those countries that
only makes sense. It not only makes sense for jobs and commerce, but it
also makes sense in terms of our good relations with our friends in the
region. No better friend do we have than in Colombia, right next door
to this very concerning state of Venezuela.
The reason I come to the floor specifically today is that when we
sent this letter on May 25, we expected to receive a response. Yet just
last Friday, Assistant Secretary Arturo Valenzuela, Assistant Secretary
of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, was asked about this letter
because there was an upcoming trip by the Secretary of State to South
America.
Secretary Valenzuela was asked why Secretary Clinton was not going to
Venezuela, and he explained. Then the question of this letter came up,
and his response was:
Oh, I don't--because I was traveling, I don't know anything
about that letter, so I'd have to find out.
Now, I know they get a lot of letters over at the Department of
State, but this letter is signed by 12 Senators. It has been widely
covered in the media. It was relevant enough that someone would ask the
question at a press conference. Yet Mr. Valenzuela, through some
oversight, was unaware of the letter.
I look forward to getting a response from Secretary Clinton and
Assistant Secretary Valenzuela to this letter. There is a gathering
storm in Venezuela. As much as we have to look across the ocean to our
fears about Iran, their development of nuclear weapons and what they
are going to do with those nuclear weapons, there is a concern to our
south, very close to our shores in Venezuela, and a dangerous
combination which is occurring between Iran and Venezuela, Ahmadinejad
and Hugo Chavez.
If we do not stay focused on it, mark my words, 3, 5 years from now
we are going to be seeing all the same developments in Venezuela we
have seen in Iran. We are going to see them starting to develop a
nuclear presence for ``peaceful'' purposes. They are going to be
playing from the same playbook Ahmadinejad has played from in Iran.
We have to take aggressive measures against Iran. I have called, as
many Senators have, for this administration to get to work in a more
expeditious way to impose those sanctions--meaningful, hard sanctions
on Iran to stop
[[Page S4636]]
their nuclear program. We are reading in the newspaper today about
Iran--all the circuitous efforts it takes to reflag ships, rename ships
so they can get weapons back into Iran and avoid our sanctions. We have
to crack down on that. That is the diplomatic and foreign affairs
problem of today. But the diplomatic and foreign affairs problem of
tomorrow is Venezuela, and steps should be taken right now to work
ahead of that problem so that 3 to 5 years from now we are not having
all the same troubles with Venezuela that we are now having with Iran.
Yet they are far closer to the United States than Iran is.
So we sent this letter, and we look forward to the response. There
are a lot of ramifications of declaring a country a state sponsor of
terror. I am not asking that be done today. But I am asking it be
seriously evaluated. That is why Senator Ensign and myself, along with
10 other of our colleagues, sent this letter, and we would like to hear
a response. We would like it to be taken seriously. We would like this
administration to focus on Venezuela before it is a problem that gets
ahead of us, before it is a problem we do not have enough time to
address in a proactive and thoughtful manner.
Little problems become big problems. This problem is already beyond
being little. Let's get on top of it. Let's evaluate it. We hope we get
a response to this letter as soon as possible, from the Secretary of
State and the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere
Affairs.
With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Gulf Coast Oilspill
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, I wish to say a few words about the
oilspill in the gulf and what has or has not been happening recently. I
don't think there is an American citizen who can really avoid seeing on
television or hearing on the radio or reading in the newspapers about
the devastating consequences of the oilspill in the Gulf of Mexico.
The fact is, we have drilled for oil and have been producing oil in
the gulf for a long time, dating back to the 1940s. I believe something
like 50,000 wells have been dug offshore. So it is not a surprise that
there has been oil development offshore in this country, and we have
achieved drilling a fair amount of oil for the needs of this country.
But it is also the case that deep well drilling--in this case, a well
that is drilled into the ocean floor a full mile below the surface of
the water and then down another 30,000 feet below that--is a very
different situation.
It is also now clear that this company, the company that was engaged
in drilling this well, did not have the wherewithal, the technical
capability to decide: If something disastrous happens, we should be
able to shut down the gusher of oil. I would have thought and would
have expected that the company would have covered the worst possible
circumstances. What if the worst thing happens? Do we have the
capability to address it? The answer at this point is no.
This is the 50th day in which oil has been gushing out into the Gulf
of Mexico from this oil rig blowup. It is pretty clear to everybody
that, after trying a series of different things, the BP Corporation
does not know how to address this gusher of oil into the gulf.
I was reading this morning another news story about this.
I confess to my colleagues that I don't live on the gulf. I am not
from one of those States. They would, perhaps, know much more about it
than I would. But most of us in this country are learning from the
investigations that are being done, and we are learning more and more
about not only what has happened, but what the consequences are.
The story this morning: ``Rate of Oil Leak, Still Not Clear . . . ''
So 50 days later, we don't understand how much is coming out of the
faucet, how much is spilling from this gusher into the Gulf of Mexico.
It is difficult or almost impossible to measure what has been the
effect in recent days of some amount of containment that has been
successful. We know they are not containing all of the oil, but they
are gathering some of the oil. The question is, What amount? What
percentage of the oil that is gushing into the gulf is being contained?
One of the things that bothered me a fair amount is I am quoting now
from a New York Times piece:
On Sunday, engineers halted their efforts to close all four
vents on the capping device, because even with one vent
closed, the amount of oil being captured was approaching
15,000 barrels a day, the processing capacity of the
collection ship on the surface.
If you are going to be able to collect more oil, why would you not
have enough ships on the surface to be able to allow you to close more
of those vents and to capture more oil and have the requisite number of
ships on the surface to deal with it? I don't understand that at all.
But it seems to me that every time we read something new about this, it
is that somebody didn't plan properly to try to address this issue.
The story goes on to say:
Some scientists involved in the Flow Rate Technical Group
say they would like to produce a better estimate, but they
are frustrated by what they view as stonewalling on BP's
part, including tardiness in producing high-resolution video
that could be subjected to computer analysis, as well as the
company's reluctance to produce a direct measurement of the
flow rate.
Continuing to quote:
They said the installation of the new device and the rising
flow of oil to the surface had only reinforced their
conviction they did not have enough information.
A Dr. Leifer said:
It's apparent that BP is playing games with us, presumably
under the advice of their legal team. It's six weeks that
it's been dumping into the gulf, and still no measurements.
Again, that is a direct quote from Dr. Leifer in this article.
All of us understand that the consequences of this are devastating.
We stand here and debate and talk and we go to hearings, yet there are
people at the end of a dock in some small town who look out, and all of
those fishing boats are idle, sitting at the dock, because it has
destroyed the fishing in that area. The shrimpers who would normally be
out dealing with the shrimp beds, their boats are idle, their nets are
idle. Those are people who are losing money every day, the people who
can't make a monthly payment on their boat that is sitting on the dock
because they can't go out because their fishing industry is gone. Those
people have to make payments at the end of the month. The person with
the cafe or the restaurant on the dock that has very few people
visiting these days is losing money hand over fist. You could go on and
on about the consequences of what this has meant to the gulf--to the
families, to small businesses, to the fishing industry, the shrimpers,
and so on.
So it seems to me it is time now, after 50 days, to ask a couple of
other questions, and I am going to make a suggestion. I asked at a
hearing recently whether the BP commitment, which says: We will pay or
reimburse for all ``legitimate'' costs--I asked the Justice Department
in a hearing: Is this pledge by BP a binding commitment? Does it bind
anybody? The answer by the Justice department representative is that,
no, it is not binding. It is a pledge.
I think that is certainly better than not having a pledge--to have a
company whose rig has caused this gusher of oil, this unbelievable
spill into the Gulf of Mexico--if that company makes a pledge, it is
better than having a company walk away. On the other hand, a pledge
without a binding commitment doesn't mean very much.
What I suggest at this point is that we, after 50 days, decide to go
beyond that pledge. I have seen people interviewed who have said: we
have submitted to BP what is happening to our small business, our
families, and our boats, and haven't gotten a response, or we got
turned down, or this or that. It seems that we ought to understand the
consequences of this, and the depth of the costs is going to require
something very different.
What I propose is the following: I think on this 50th day of the
spill, what I believe should happen is that the Justice Department
should go to BP and
[[Page S4637]]
say: Let us formalize an agreement in which you put the first $10
billion from BP into a gulf coast recovery program. That gulf coast
recovery fund would be available and would be run by two interests. One
would be a special master who would represent the public interest, and
the second would be a counselor who would represent BP's interest, and
they would jointly manage the $10 billion gulf coast recovery funds--
and it may need much more than that. At least the first step is that
you have $10 billion in a fund, and you have some public interest that
is now involved in making judgments. Look, BP has its own interests at
heart. I don't doubt that it wants this gusher stopped. I understand
that. I don't doubt at all that BP wants to minimize the damage. I am
not suggesting otherwise.
I am suggesting this: When presented with a range of alternatives, or
of opportunities, or of actions, that a company will have to act in its
best interest. That is the requirement for its shareholders. That may
well not be in tandem or may not travel parallel with what is in the
public's interest. That is why I think that it is now time to say to BP
that you have made a pledge; is the pledge binding? Does it have real
money behind it?
We read and see that they have spent $1.5 billion at this point. This
is a company that made $150 billion in net profit in 10 years. That is
$15 billion a year. Again, what I suggest is a $10 billion payment into
a gulf coast recovery fund, which the company would have a part in the
management of, and a special master representing the public interest
would have the management of, and that we proceed from there and
determine how much more is required.
Perhaps if the $10 billion is not all required, the company gets
reimbursed. My own expectation is that the cost of this spill will far
exceed the $10 billion when it is all done. This is going to last for
years. We know that. This is not something that will be resolved in the
next 6 months. I am talking now about the costs. Let us hope that
finally, at long last, this spill, this gusher, gets shut down. But
when that happens, there is so much more to do to try to understand
what this means to the families who made their living on that coast.
What does it mean to them? How do we go forward and recover? With what?
That is why I think this gulf coast recovery fund, with BP's money and
a special master involved in at least bringing the public interest into
the discussion about what kind of outlays from that fund are made and
to whom and for what purposes, is critical.
I am going to write to the Justice Department today suggesting that
this is an approach that should be taken. Look, if BP is approached and
BP says, you know what, we don't intend to put money into a fund, that
tells us a little something, doesn't it? Is the money going to be
there, or isn't it? That is a partial answer to that. If the company
says we don't intend to put money into a gulf coast recovery fund--if
that is the case, then we have legislation on the floor with which we
could address that issue. There are ways to address this with fees and
other applications to the company that caused this damage. Better, it
seems to me, to take the company at its word when it pledges that it
will reimburse legitimate costs; but also say to them, as a result of
that pledge, let's now make it binding and let's begin to put together
this gulf coast recovery fund that represents a binding commitment from
the company.
If the company ultimately doesn't pay these costs, we know what would
happen. It will go on the backs of the American taxpayer. That is not a
fair way to resolve this, and it is not acceptable. It is a very large
company. It has made a substantial amount of money. It made $6 billion,
as reported, in the first quarter of this year alone. Surely a $10
billion initial commitment into a gulf coast recovery fund is not too
much to ask, to begin the construction of a fund that would merge both
the public interest, which is important, with the private interest of
BP, to make sure the funding is not only made available but that it is
used in a way that addresses the significant costs that have been
visited upon the people who live and work in that region.
I know there are many ideas that are being kicked around in the
Congress and elsewhere to try to address a wide range of issues. Many
of them have great merit. It seems to me that we need to do something
for the family this morning who is wondering whether it is going to
survive, whether its business can survive, whether it can make its boat
payment on the fishing boat at the end of the month when there are no
fish to catch. When the restaurant pulls the shades because it has no
customers and it is right near the dock--all these folks, and so many
others, who have lost their jobs and who confront this questions of:
What about us? What are we going to do? Will there be recovery for us,
for my family, and for our small town?
I think the best way for us to address this is to say let's make sure
the pledge made by BP becomes a binding one. I think that can be done
without legislation. It can be done by this administration and the
Justice Department reaching out and signing an agreement creating such
a fund, creating a special master with BP, having BP deposit the money
so it could begin a robust, significant, and real recovery fund. If
this company says that is not their intent, that they don't intend to
do that, or they are not interested in doing that, then it seems to me
a binding requirement is one we should take up here on the floor of the
Senate, and very quickly. There are plenty of ways--and I will not go
into them now--for us to address the question of whether the company
that caused this spill, this gusher of oil, which is certainly the most
significant disaster in the gulf in the last century and perhaps more--
if the company that caused that--whose rig caused that, says we don't
intend to be a part of something like this, then there are approaches
we can use here in the Senate to make that company responsible for it
in a binding way.
Mr. President, with that, I yield the floor and suggest the absence
of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Amendment No. 4303 to Amendment No. 4301
(Purpose: To establish 3 year discretionary spending caps)
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I call up the amendment that is at the
desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Alabama [Mr. Sessions], for himself and
Mrs. McCaskill, proposes an amendment numbered 4303 to
amendment 4301.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading
of the amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of
Amendments.'')
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, Senator McCaskill and I are again
offering this amendment that would place a cap on discretionary
spending in which we participate in every day but that tends to violate
the budget.
Our budget is a critically important component of our financial
management. I have been a member of the Budget Committee for a number
of years, and it is very frustrating to see how it has gotten around
the budget. The legislation that is before us is just another example
of violating the budget in ways that are not responsible. For example,
the unemployment compensation and the payments to physicians are not
emergencies. They are just not. Any responsible household, any
responsible city, county, or State government knows that. When those
leaders deal with financial crises, they have to figure out how to
handle them.
What we are doing with this legislation before us is borrowing money
to pay a fundamental obligation of the United States of America, which
is to pay doctors an adequate wage for doing Medicare work. They are
already paid less for Medicare than private insurance pays them for
doing the very same procedures, but we have another shortfall here. If
Congress does not pass legislation, physicians will take a 21-percent
cut in the amount of money they are paid. That cannot work because our
physicians are already, in
[[Page S4638]]
many cases, losing money on Medicare treatment of our seniors. They
cannot take a 21-percent cut. They will quit doing the work. This is
not a matter of debate. It will collapse the Medicare system. We need
to do this, but that is the kind of expenditure that is fundamental. It
is part of the obligation we have had for many years to pay physicians
to do Medicare work. They do not do it for nothing. It ought not to be
paid for by borrowing the money on top of all the debt we are now
running up in this country.
Our national debt just hit $13 trillion. We will, in 5 years--now 4--
double the national debt, and in 10 years we will triple the national
debt. Why? Because we are taking items that are baseline requirements
of this government and miraculously converting them to emergencies and
then breaking the budget. If anybody objects, such as Senator Bunning
did on behalf of his 40-some-odd grandchildren, he is attacked as being
against physicians or against the unemployed. Senator Coburn has raised
these issues. I support both of them. They are both right.
If the American people understood how irresponsibly we are managing
their money, they would be even more upset with us than they already
are. The American people are right to be upset with us. We are
converting fundamental governmental obligations to emergency spending.
Why? Because we do not have to pay for it; we can just borrow it. That
is not right.
Senator McCaskill, my Democratic colleague, is concerned about these
issues. We have worked together to offer this amendment that would make
it harder to violate the budget caps, to make it more difficult and to
help us to be more responsible in our spending. Quite a number of my
Democratic colleagues joined with us in this amendment and voted for
it. Fifty-nine Senators voted for it on one of our previous votes. We
were one short of what is necessary to make it law--just one vote
short.
We are offering this amendment again. We have taken quite a number of
steps to make this legislation palatable and to respond to concerns
that some have raised, such as, would it impact the military? No. Would
it impact legitimate emergency spending? No.
We have done some things that some may believe weaken the amendment a
bit, but it still adds some real strength to it and real value. This
kind of budget cap legislation is what allowed us to balance the budget
in the late 1990s. I know President Clinton has touted that he balanced
the budget. If I recall, Congress--which appropriates every dollar that
is spent--shut the government down at one point to try to contain
President Clinton's proposed spending, and succeeded in doing so. That
eventually led to a balanced budget. The legislation that was in effect
at that time, which was very similar to this proposal, expired, and
this is one reason spending has surged.
I thank the Chair for the opportunity to offer this amendment. We
will talk on it again later. I hope that we can enact these provisions
into law and that we will get that one extra vote necessary to make a
real bipartisan statement. We had bipartisan support for this amendment
last time, and it would make a real bipartisan statement to the whole
financial world that we are beginning to take seriously our
responsibility to reduce this surging deficit. Only then will we begin
to see the kind of stability in our economic markets that we must have.
I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa is recognized.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, today, our body starts debate on
expiring tax and health provisions. Around this Capitol building, the
nickname of these items is called extenders. I wish to make a couple of
points on the process before I get into the substance of the
substitute. My first point will reflect on how much the Democratic
leadership has avoided a simpler, clearer, bipartisan approach. My
second point will consider all of the other time-sensitive, unfinished
tax legislation that appears to be abandoned with only a few weeks left
in this session.
My first point deals with a conscious decision to use a partisan
process for bipartisan issues. What I find surprising is that we are
taking up a package that, like the HIRE Act jobs bill of a few weeks
ago, absolutely belongs to the bicameral House and Senate Democratic
leadership. It was negotiated between House and Senate Democratic
leaders, with some input from their tax-writing committees and staff.
These discussions occurred entirely behind closed doors. As far as I
know, it was a Democrats-only discussion. It is not a conference
agreement, where things are worked out in a sophisticated conference
committee made up of people from the House and Senate.
Then, in addition, at the very last minute, the compromise took on
the properties of an amoeba. In that amoeba fashion, the House Rules
Committee split the bill into two pieces, one dealing with the so-
called Medicare doctor fix and the rest of the bill dealing with the
balance of that package. Then, under the magic of the House Rules
Committee, this amoeba-like bill was reconstituted into one legislative
product, and that is the underlying bill Leader Reid has brought before
the Senate this very day.
I am relieved to see that it appears the Senate will process
extenders in a way that is different from the way the HIRE Act jobs
bill was handled. It looks as though we Senators will have a chance to
represent our constituents and shape this bill, because Leader Reid has
not filled the amendment tree or filed cloture at the start of debate.
That is a real relief around this body, where amendment trees have been
filled and cloture has been filed.
Back home, folks wonder why it is taking Congress so long to deal
with these routine extenders. As an example: As I left church Sunday in
Cedar Falls, IA, a person who has investment in a biodiesel plant wants
to know when we are going to pass the biodiesel tax credit bill. Most
of the tax provisions expired almost a half a year ago, on December 31,
2009. Folks are angry that Congress seems to be dithering, among other
things, on the 71 tax provisions. In my State, it is a biodiesel tax
credit that always comes up, but people are wondering about the
dithering generally. And, of course, we even have physicians across the
country being frustrated that this Congress has allowed a 21-percent
cut in payments to go into effect again this year. Payment cuts of this
magnitude severely impact physicians and health care providers and
practitioners throughout the country, and they significantly threaten
beneficiary access to care.
Medicare beneficiaries' access to physicians and other needed medical
care has been jeopardized this year as never before because Senate
Democratic leadership has once again failed to pass an essential
physician update in a timely manner. We could have wrapped up this
time-sensitive legislative business 4 months ago. We could have taken
up a bipartisan package that I put together with my friend, Finance
Committee Chairman Baucus of Montana. To be sure, some of the structure
in this package reflects the agreement that my friend and I reached.
But this package, in terms of the impact on the deficit, is likely
several times the size of the package we agreed upon. Virtually all of
the additional cost is due to proposals I would not have agreed to in
representing my Republican Conference.
I was under the impression that the Senate Democratic leadership was
genuine in its desire to work on a bipartisan basis, but clearly I was
mistaken. Although the Senate Democratic leadership was highly involved
in the development of a bipartisan bill, they arbitrarily decided to
replace it with a bill that skews toward their liberal wing. That is
why we are where we are this very day. There is a liberal agenda that
exalts open-ended deficit hiking, spending, and tax increases, and
doing it above everything else. Angry vocal members with that view seem
to have dominated the decisionmaking of the Democratic leadership in
resolving routine items.
The actions in the House a couple of weeks ago go on to further prove
my point. The Senate Republican leaders backed the Baucus-Grassley
compromise of last February. To them, it seemed to be a balanced
package. It was largely offset, it was leaner than most Democrats
wanted, but it was thicker than most Republicans wanted. Republicans
preferred a fully offset package using spending cuts; Democrats
resisted most spending cut offsets
[[Page S4639]]
and wanted many multiples of the level of spending with which
Republicans were comfortable. So it is ideal, because this is the way
it works most of the time between Senator Baucus and me.
The Baucus-Grassley compromise was a genuine middle ground. But for
the liberal core of the Democratic caucus, it was their way or the
highway. Leader Reid responded to that pressure and scuttled the
Baucus-Grassley compromise. Ironically, almost 4 months later, it looks
as though the Democratic caucus is moving closer to the structure of
the Baucus-Grassley compromise of last February.
The Senate Republican Conference, seeing the alarming growth in
deficits and debt in the intervening 4 months, will press hard for a
fully offset package. For those in my conference, several fiscal
events--and these all occurring in the intervening 4 months since the
Baucus-Grassley bill was scuttled--have been compelling on my side of
the aisle viewing this legislation a little bit differently.
The first event is the second opinions we are receiving on the fiscal
impact of the health care bill. The Congressional Budget Office has
revised the official spending upward.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
a copy of the CBO's May 11 letter to Congressman Jerry Lewis. The
letter is accompanied by two tables that identify explicit
authorizations of discretionary funding. These tables are available
along with the full text of the letter on the CBO's website at
www.cbo.gov.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
U.S. Congress,
Congressional Budget Office,
Washington, DC, May 11, 2010.
Hon. Jerry Lewis,
Ranking Member, Committee on Appropriations, House of
Representatives, Washington, DC.
Dear Congressman: As you requested, the Congressional
Budget Office is providing additional information about the
potential effects of H.R. 3590, the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (PPACA, Public Law 111-148), on
discretionary spending. The following analysis updates and
expands upon the analysis of potential discretionary spending
under PPACA that CBO provided on March 13, 2010. In
particular, it provides an update of the earlier tally of
specified authorization amounts, as well as a list of
programs or activities for which no specific funding levels
are identified in the legislation but for which the act
authorizes the appropriation of ``such sums as may be
necessary.''
Potential discretionary costs under PPACA arise from the
effects of the legislation on a variety of federal programs
and agencies. The law establishes a number of new programs
and activities, as well as authorizing new funding for
existing programs. By their nature, however, all such
potential effects on discretionary spending are subject to
future appropriation actions, which could result in greater
or smaller costs than the sums authorized by the legislation.
Moreover, in many cases, the law authorizes future
appropriations but does not specify a particular amount.
CBO does not have a comprehensive estimate of all of the
potential discretionary costs associated with PPACA, but we
can provide information on the major components of such
costs. Those discretionary costs fall into three general
categories:
The costs that will be incurred by federal agencies to
implement the new policies established by PPACA, such as
administrative expenses for the Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) and the Internal Revenue Service for
carrying out key requirements of the legislation.
Explicit authorizations for a variety of grant and other
program spending for which specified funding levels for one
or more years are provided in the act. (Such cases include
provisions where a specified funding level is authorized for
an initial year along with the authorization of such sums as
may be necessary for continued funding in subsequent years.)
Explicit authorizations for a variety of grant and other
program spending for which no specific funding levels are
identified in the legislation. That type of provision
generally includes legislative language that authorizes the
appropriation of ``such sums as may be necessary,'' often for
a particular period of time.
CBO estimates that total authorized costs in the first two
categories probably exceed $115 billion over the 2010-2019
period, as detailed below. We do not have an estimate of the
potential costs of authorizations in the third category.
Implementation Costs for Federal Agencies--The
administrative and other costs for federal agencies to
implement the act's provisions will be funded through the
appropriations process; sufficient discretionary funding will
be essential to implement this legislation in the time frame
called for. Major costs for such implementation activities
will include:
Costs to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of implementing
the eligibility determination, documentation, and
verification processes for premium and cost-sharing credits.
CBO expects that those costs will probably total between $5
billion and $10 billion over 10 years.
Costs to HHS, especially the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, and the Office of Personnel Management for
implementing the changes in Medicare, Medicaid, and the
Children's Health Insurance Program, as well as certain
reforms to the private insurance market. CBO expects that
those costs will probably total at least $5 billion to $10
billion over 10 years.
Explicit Authorizations of Discretionary Funding--Explicit
authorizations are identified in Tables 1 and 2. Table 1
presents a list of items for which PPACA specifies the
authorized amount of funding for at least one year. It also
includes items for which initial specified funding levels
existed under prior law but for which PPACA extends the
authority for continued spending. The specified and estimated
amounts shown in Table 1 total about $105 billion over the
2010-2019 period.
Table 1 differs from CBO's table of specified
authorizations provided on March 13, 2010, in the following
ways:
Certain provisions that extend (existing) authorizations
with a specified level have been added. (In the previous
version of that table, only new authorizations were
included.) Also, provisions that provide mandatory grants for
2010 but authorize future spending of such sums as necessary
(subject to appropriation) have been included. Those
provisions are noted in the updated table.
Table 1 includes an estimate of the cost of section 10221
of PPACA, which incorporates the provisions of S. 1790, the
Indian Health Care Improvement Reauthorization and Extension
Act by reference. (CBO had not completed an estimate of the
Indian health provisions for the March 13 version of the
authorization table.) Those provisions authorize the
appropriation of such sums as are necessary for the Indian
Health Service (IHS) for carrying out responsibilities
broadly similar to those in law prior to enactment of PPACA.
As a result, the amounts included in Table 1 reflect recent
appropriations for those IHS programs, with adjustments for
anticipated inflation in later years.
Table 1 also includes a few corrections to the table
provided on March 13. For example, section 5207, which
authorizes funding for the National Health Service Corps, was
inadvertently left off the March 13 table but is included in
Table 1.
Table 2 presents a list of new activities for which PPACA
includes only a broad authorization for the appropriation of
``such sums as may be necessary.'' For those activities, the
lack of guidance in the legislation about how new activities
should be conducted means that, in many cases, CBO does not
have a sufficient basis for estimating what the ``necessary''
amounts might be over the 2010-2020 period.
Although Tables 1 and 2 provide more information about the
discretionary costs associated with PPACA, they do not
represent all of the potential budgetary implications of
changes to existing discretionary programs--including both
potential increases and decreases relative to recent
appropriations. Some of those changes could affect spending
under existing authorizations or may lead the Congress to
consider making changes--up or down--in the funding for
existing programs. Moreover, some of the potential new costs
for individual provisions of the legislation may be covered
by the broad estimate of $5 billion to $10 billion for
administrative costs to HHS.
I hope you find this information useful. If you have any
questions about this updated analysis of PPACA's implications
for future discretionary appropriations, please contact me or
CBO staff. The primary staff contacts for this analysis are
Jean Hearne and Julie Lee.
Sincerely,
Douglas W. Elmendorf,
Director.
Mr. GRASSLEY. That letter documents CBO's projections that health
reform will result in at least $115 billion in additional spending
beyond what was previously included in the total of last March.
In addition, Douglas Elmendorf, Director of the Congressional Budget
Office, recently indicated that the landmark health care reform bill
would not accomplish its primary fiscal objective of reducing Federal
health expenditures.
Dr. Elmendorf made this point in a presentation to the Institute of
Medicine on May 26, of this year. The presentation is titled ``Health
Costs and the Federal Budget'' and is available on the CBO website as
well.
The second event is the record buildup of public debt. Last week, the
Federal public debt passed $13 trillion. On that monstrous number, $1
trillion was added in the last year all by itself.
The third event is the continuous mounting of the cost of the
stimulus bill. Recent Congressional Budget Office scoring shows that
policy, instead
[[Page S4640]]
of being roughly $800 billion, is now exceeding $1 trillion.
The fourth event is the fiscal troubles in the country of Greece. Too
much spending and public debt has put Greek public finance in a state
of distress.
The fifth event is the troubling developments in States with large
open-ended social spending programs and already very high income taxes.
The people who send us here are also reading these reports and they are
rightfully worried about these fiscal troubles. They are sending one
message to Washington, and it is as clear as any bell. They are saying:
Reverse course on deficits and debt. They say we in Congress ought to
restrain ourselves and our policies; pull back on extra spending.
Republicans heard that message a while ago, and it looks to me as
though Democrats are hearing the same thing.
To sum up at this point, on the first point I have been speaking
about--on process--the Democratic leadership, by avoiding a genuine
bipartisan compromise, is continuing to take a very long path to
resolving this overdue unfinished business. The bipartisan path to
succeed was set forth almost 4 months ago--early February--and that was
the Baucus-Grassley compromise.
Unfortunately, the tax offsets--largely noncontroversial--were lifted
from that compromise and used for something totally unrelated, but to
cover the bloated spending in the health care bill. To retain the
spirit of that compromise, those offsets would need to be replaced by
restraints on spending. Republicans, in our alternative, will show the
way to achieve those savings.
As has been the case for the last year and a half, those who pay
income tax and those who receive government checks aren't treated
similarly.
Even with those revisions, keep in mind on net, the taxpayer is
paying at least $40 billion more in this bill. Spending constituents
receive almost $100 billion in new spending.
My second process point goes to time-sensitive legislative business
that is yet unfinished in terms of revenue and taxpayers affected. The
other unfinished tax legislative business dwarfs the measures in this
bill now before the Senate.
There are three major policy areas that need to be addressed. I do
not know when they are going to be addressed. These three issues are
the death tax, the current alternative minimum tax fix--that is an
annual process we go through--and, three, the bipartisan 2001 and 2003
tax relief plans. So I want to go into these in some detail.
I have a chart that shows the status of these three policy issues.
Let's start with the death tax, or the estate tax, whatever you want to
call it. Since the first of the year there has been no death tax. If
you died, up to this point, presumably, your estate is going to be tax
free. At the end of this year, the death tax then reappears, and not in
a very friendly way.
After failing to act for almost 3 years in the majority, the House
Democratic leadership put a death tax reform measure before the House
last year at the same time it should have been discussed in the Senate.
But the Senate has not acted on the House bill.
I might suggest to you that we had to act on that health care bill
because it takes effect in 2014, but tax extenders and the estate tax
that had to be settled in December were not even discussed.
In Iowa I can tell you that confusion and the anxiety over the
uncertain state of the death tax comes up in my town meetings all the
time. I would be surprised if other Senators are not hearing the same
thing. I got a letter signed by 750 lawyers and accountants in my State
saying: How do we advise our clients? What is the estate tax going to
be for the future?
It is not a case of just what the tax law is, it is the case of
millions of people wanting to plan estates and cannot do it. I refer
again to my friend, Chairman Baucus, who was working on a compromise
proposal with Senators Lincoln, Kyl, and myself.
Unfortunately, the liberal core of the Senate Democratic caucus seems
to prefer no action at all. My friend, the junior Senator from Vermont,
has been transparent about his desire to leave the law as it is; in
other words, next year only have a million-dollar exemption.
Others feel just as strongly, but perhaps are not as transparent as
the junior Senator from Vermont. In any event, the effect of failing to
reform current law will be to raise the number of people hit by the
death tax by a factor of 10 times. What I am saying is, stalling out a
bipartisan reform, which seems to be the liberal core's objective, will
likely mean 10 times as many family farmers and small businesses will
be hit with the death tax. A reform like the one envisioned by Senators
Lincoln and Kyl will mean only the richest 10 percent of dead peoples'
estate will face the death tax.
Now I would like to turn to a second major area of unfinished
business; that is, the alternative minimum tax fix. This is one of
those yearly or biannual things the Congress goes through so that
middle-class Americans will not pay a tax that was meant just for the
very wealthy. So we are talking about this year's tax fix already.
The law says 30 million Americans, or maybe more accurately 24
million Americans, ought to be paying this income tax right now. The
trouble is they do not file until next year, so it gives us a chance to
do something about it. But for those filing quarterly, if they are not
taking that into consideration they are violating the law.
In the next week, on June 15, the second installment of this year's
estimated income tax is due. Last year, 24 million middle-income
families were spared from the unfair hit of the alternative minimum
tax. The fix meant $2,300 per family. This year those figures are going
to go up.
If the law is not changed, all those families will have to pay at
least $2,300 more per family. In my State of Iowa, it means at least
124,000 middle-income families will be paying additional income tax
that was only meant for the very wealthy.
No bill has been marked up or passed in the House that deals with
this problem. Under current law, some of these millions of families
should be paying estimated tax next week, June 15.
Finally, let's take a look at the third major area of unfinished tax
business. Here we have a chart, and I am referring to the widely
applicable rate cuts in family tax relief from the 2001 and 2003
bipartisan tax relief plans.
Virtually every American who pays income tax, and millions more who
do not under current law, will have a higher tax bill if we do not
extend the 2001 and 2003 bipartisan tax relief bills. For years I have
referred to the sunset of these plans as a tax wall. Middle-income
families will run right into a very firm wall of tax increases.
For a family of four with an income of $50,000, that tax wall is
$2,300. For a single mom with two kids earning $30,000, that tax wall
is $1,100. No bill has been marked up or passed in the House that deals
with this problem.
You may hear some on the other side say: Too bad about the sunset.
They argue that the bipartisan group wrote the tax relief plans with a
sunset. The sunset, therefore, is the responsibility of the bipartisan
authors of these plans.
If that argument is advanced by members of the current majority,
keeping in mind they have had control of Congress for 3\1/2\ years, I
wait for that as an opportunity to quickly respond. My response will be
to provide a citation of all of the filibusters led by the Democratic
leadership on Republican attempts to make all three of these areas of
bipartisan tax relief permanent law.
The bill before us has very timely and important measures. In nearly
all instances, the expiring tax provisions are treated the same way as
they were treated under the Baucus-Grassley agreement of almost 4
months ago, going back to early February.
I thank my friend, the chairman of the committee, Senator Baucus, and
the Democratic leadership for holding on to those pieces of the Baucus-
Grassley agreement. Especially important is an extension of the
biodiesel tax credit because we have thousands of workers--and I have
seen the figure of 23,000--who have been idled throughout 44 States of
the United States as they have shut down the plants.
So if you really want a jobs bill, reinstate the biodiesel tax credit
and you will put thousands of workers in Iowa back to work, and about
23,000 nationally.
Likewise, Iowa companies, such as Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids,
IA,
[[Page S4641]]
have taken charges to earnings as the research and development credit
has lapsed. Unfortunately, there are some notable deviations from the
Baucus-Grassley agreement of last February. Two pieces of the
Midwestern disaster relief package were dropped from the Baucus-
Grassley agreement in the Senate bill. The alternative fuels credit was
altered to remove coal-to-liquids and other promising cutting edge
technologies.
The bill before us actually also leaves out some very important
provisions of rural health care. These rural health care provisions
where included in the Baucus-Grassley agreement of last February but
have since been dropped by the Democratic leadership.
Here again we will have a Republican alternative that will show the
way on including these important items and having them offset; in other
words, they will be paid for. These important rural health care
provisions would keep ambulances running in rural areas and improve
Medicare payments for both urban and rural hospitals so they are able
to keep their doors open.
There is also an important provision left off the bill that ensures
that physicians in rural areas are paid fairly relative to urban
States.
Is that such a hard thing to figure, that if you are under Medicare,
a national program, you ought to be treated the same in rural areas as
urban America?
The bill before us also fails to protect beneficiaries from having
their physical and occupational therapy cut off. It also fails to
extend the add-on payment for Medicare mental health services furnished
by psychologists and mental health counselors.
This add-on has been critical in improving access to mental health
care services for Medicare beneficiaries and even military personnel
suffering from stress and other mental health issues. Again, the
Republican alternative will afford these protections and offset the
costs; in other words, it will be paid for.
The bill before us also fails to extend the Q-I program, which
provides assistance to low-income beneficiaries. The Q-I program covers
the Part B premium and out-of-pocket costs for seniors. Without it,
many low-income seniors will be forced to decide between getting needed
medical care and basic necessities such as food.
The bill before us misses the opportunity to fix the incredibly
short-sighted policy in the health reform bill that created a Medicaid
payment cliff for primary care providers.
Have we not learned anything from our Medicare provider payment
problems? The Republican alternative converts the 2-years of additional
payments to Medicare providers to a grant program to get States to
increase payments to providers. The same dollars, but we do not end up
having a cliff where there will have to be a lot of money made up at
some future time.
On the offsets side, as I indicated above, revenue raisers that were
noncontroversial were lifted, and these were, in a sense, transferred
for yet more spending in that bloated health care reform bill that
passed in March.
This meant the bicameral Democratic leadership had to yet scrape
deeper to this offset barrel. They pulled out a House-passed change on
carried interest. They raided the international tax policy area. They
moved revenue-raising ideas out of that area and used them to offset
proposals like yet another expansion of the Build America Bonds. That
is a program I have questioned in the past.
This transaction cannot bode well for efforts to reform our outdated
and uncompetitive international tax titles.
It follows the destruction of the bipartisan tax policy reform of the
worldwide interest allocation rules. The losers are U.S.-based
companies and their workers. The net tax cost of doing business
globally will rise for American-based firms. We already have a
noncompetitive corporate tax system. Why would we want to make it more
uncompetitive? Why would we want to transfer more jobs overseas? This
won't rise for competing firms based in other countries. So Japan, the
UK, Germany--name any country--those competing firms will have a leg up
because of the tax policy in this bill.
Some characterized these generic tax increases as ending a tax
incentive for shipping jobs overseas. As I have indicated, the opposite
will occur. The embedded higher taxes burden only U.S.-based companies.
In a globally competitive environment, with much of the growth in sales
overseas, the impact of those taxes will have to be absorbed here in
the United States. The after-tax rate of return on those U.S.-based
business activities will decline. The costs will have to be cut
elsewhere to pull the rate of return back up to a competitive level
because, in this global economy, we have to compete. U.S.-based labor
and other expenses will, as we might not be surprised, be cut.
As with the health care bill, the American people are sending a
message to those of us representing them in the Congress. The message
is this: Finish these time-sensitive matters and do it in a fiscally
responsible manner. Of course, that is a message that has been ignored
for several months.
Now we get to these tax extenders. They have been attacked as fat-cat
tax breaks one week. Then a week later the same critics have labeled
them as job incentives. They have been hijacked and manipulated for
partisan purposes. That is why, 4 months after scuttling a bipartisan
compromise on bipartisan policy, the Senate finds itself struggling to
complete this bill. It could have been done so easily in February. This
is somehow routine, unfinished business the American people rightly
expect us to complete.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland is recognized.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I take this time to talk about amendment
No. 4304, which I hope I will be able to get cleared by setting aside
the pending amendment in order to offer it.
At this time, let me bring to the attention of my colleagues what the
amendment would do. This amendment would affect the Federal employees'
health benefit plans by allowing the administrator to change the
current rules to enroll children up to the age of 26. Currently, the
restriction for Federal employees is that they can only enroll
unmarried children to age 22.
There are 8 million Federal employees and retirees covered under the
Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan. As I am sure everyone is aware,
under the law recently passed and signed by President Obama, we have
now extended coverage for children up to the age of 26. However, that
becomes effective under the law for plans entered into after September
23, 2010. For most plans, the requirement to include children being
able to enroll up to age 26 would begin on January 1 of next year when
the plan year begins.
Private insurance companies have responded. They understand that this
is not really a cost issue and that it makes sense to allow the
children of the plan holders up to the age of 26 to be enrolled
immediately. Most of the private insurance companies have responded by
opening enrollment now.
OPM Director John Berry would like to do the same. He has stated he
would like to begin expanding coverage for enrollee adult children now,
rather than wait until January to offer this cost-saving benefit. The
problem is, current law prevents him from doing that because of the
definition of a dependent child being an unmarried child, age 22.
The purpose of this amendment is to give OPM the authority to start
to enroll now children who have not reached their 26th birthday. This
is particularly important knowing we are in the graduation season. Many
of us are very proud to attend our children's graduations. Many of
these children would like to remain on their parents' policy now that
they are no longer eligible for insurance at college. Unfortunately,
without this change, they will have to wait until January of next year,
which will cause a lapse in coverage.
The scoring of this is insignificant. We are not talking about a
significant amount of additional cost. In fact, we believe it is really
a cost-savings issue.
This amendment was offered as a bill and enjoys bipartisan support.
Senators Collins, Lieberman, Akaka, Rockefeller, Mikulski, Bingaman,
Johnson, Kaufman, Kerry, Landrieu, Stabenow, Warner, Dodd, Dorgan,
Levin, Cantwell, Casey, and Hagan have joined in cosponsoring this
legislation. It has the support of the National Active and Retired
Federal Employees Association, the National Federation of Federal
Employees, the American Federation of Government
[[Page S4642]]
Employees, the National Treasury Employees Union, and the list goes on.
This amendment makes abundant sense. Our clear intent is to allow
those who are under Federal employees' health benefit plans to take
advantage of enrolling their children now. This amendment basically
clarifies that law so that OPM can move forward to enroll children up
to the age of 26 immediately and not wait until January of next year,
causing a lapse in coverage. It is a bipartisan amendment,
insignificant cost. I hope it will be cleared so I may offer it, and
hopefully we can act on it without too much time.
I yield the floor.
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