[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 92 (Friday, June 18, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5141-S5143]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                   PLAYING AND WORKING FOR AMERICANS

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, within the next few minutes, in 
Johannesburg, South Africa, before almost 80,000 people, the U.S. 
soccer team will begin its World Cup quest. They are going to be 
playing Slovenia, which has the fewest citizens of any of the 
participating countries. So I wish all the athletes representing our 
country success in today's match.
  I also want to take a minute and talk about a Nevadan who is on our 
team. His name is Herculez Gomez. He is a graduate of Las Vegas public 
schools. He was, of course, an outstanding high school athlete. He 
played professionally here in America, but the team decided not to sign 
him--Kansas City--to anything he was satisfied with, so he went to 
Mexico to play. He became the No. 1 player in Mexico. He holds the 
record for scoring more goals than any person, as I understand it, who 
has played for another team in that country.
  He is a great young man, and we are very proud of him. He is a great 
goal scorer, a terrific representative of Nevada and the United States 
in this tournament watched by billions of people around the world. He 
didn't play in our first game. He was standing on the sidelines. The 
coach had told him to go in, but soccer is an unusual game. It is not 
like a lot of sports. It is very difficult to substitute in a soccer 
game, and the referee didn't blow the whistle or stop the game, so he 
couldn't go in. But he will be in this game, I am sure.
  I am a great soccer fan. I often boast about my youngest son, who 
played on three national championship soccer teams for the University 
of Virginia. Anyway, I watch soccer closely.
  I wish the next remarks of mine could be as pleasant as those I have 
just given regarding Herculez Gomez. I wish we could have a lot more 
pleasant talk here in the Senate. But with what happened last night and 
what has happened for the last year and a half, it is very hard to be 
pleasant when you have people who are hurting in America.
  Unemployment is something that is difficult to understand unless you 
have been unemployed. I have never been unemployed. I am very 
fortunate. From the time I was a boy until now, I have always had a 
job, even in the summers. I worked as a very young boy, starting when I 
was very, very

[[Page S5142]]

young. But I have seen my dad trying to get a job and not able to find 
work. My father was a strong young man during the depression, and I 
heard him tell the story many times that he would go to a mine where 
they were going to hire some people, and they would line up the people 
who were prospective workers, and one of the bosses would come out and 
he would go down the line and say: I will take you, I will take you, 
and I will take you. I guess how they looked is all they had to base it 
on. They had no applications. No one filed applications.
  Well, even though it is not the Great Depression, we now have people 
going through the same thing my father went through. I heard on NPR 
this morning on the way to work that a woman has been out of work for a 
year and a half. She was hired once for 1 day. She has applied 150 
different times. She keeps a notebook of the places she has applied and 
what happens to each of those. She is going to a job fair today, hoping 
something will happen and she can get a job.
  The American people have had it with those who create messes and then 
refuse to take responsibility for cleaning them up. They are tired of 
the excuses. They are sick of the misplaced priorities that say one 
party's politics are more important than their jobs or families, their 
incomes and their savings.
  If you want to know what we stand for on this side of the aisle--
Democrats--look at our agenda this year. And our agenda has been so 
difficult because, without exception, everything we have tried to do 
has been stalled. The Republicans have made every attempt to divert our 
attention from what we want to do.
  Here is what our agenda has been: making health insurance more 
affordable and health insurance companies more accountable. What kind 
of a country would we be if we had stood silently while 50 million of 
our fellow men and women had no health insurance? That is where we 
were. If you had a job, a good job, you might have had insurance, but 
that was no guarantee either. People were losing their insurance by the 
millions as time went on. So we did something that had to be done--
health insurance.
  We protected Americans' savings and seniors' pensions from Wall 
Street greed, making sure the American people were never again asked to 
bail out a big bank. Although we were stymied every step of the way, we 
worked to stop these people on Wall Street from doing again what they 
did to the American people.
  During part of my career--in fact, for 4 years--I was chairman of the 
Nevada Gaming Commission. Now, that isn't about hunting animals; it is 
a gambling commission. We call it gaming. We did everything we could to 
make sure people who came to Nevada and gambled on the tables in Las 
Vegas or Reno or Lake Tahoe had a fair game. When they won money, they 
got to keep it; when they lost, it was their money they lost. But Wall 
Street had a much better deal than you can get anyplace in Nevada. On 
Wall Street, they gambled away our money. If they won, they kept it; if 
they lost, they came to us for help. So we took that on. That bill is 
in conference now, and we are going to come out with something the 
American people will like very much.
  We have worked hard to create jobs. Today, Joe Biden is announcing 
the 10,000th highway project that has been funded from our stimulus or 
economic recovery bill. So we have created jobs, including full-time 
work for 3 million Americans who have the stimulus to thank for the job 
they are going to today.
  In Nevada, the Recovery Act has created or saved more than 4,000 jobs 
in just the past 4 months alone. The economy in Nevada is not in good 
shape. It is getting better, but it is not good. We are one of the 
leading States in the Union in unemployment. But think how much worse 
it would be if we hadn't been able to create these jobs in Nevada with 
the recovery bill.
  Our agenda has been making sure those still looking for jobs in 
Nevada--where 14 percent are out of work--and people across the country 
have the unemployment assistance they need to make ends meet in the 
meantime. Why the Republicans would not allow people who are out of 
work to collect unemployment compensation is hard for me to comprehend. 
John McCain's chief economic adviser when he ran for President is a man 
named Mark Zandi, and Mark Zandi said the No. 1 way to stimulate the 
economy is to give people who are out of work some money--unemployment 
assistance. The Republicans rejected the advice of John McCain's chief 
economic adviser; we followed it.
  In our legislation, we cut taxes for families and businesses. Ninety-
five percent of the people in America, as a result of our stimulus 
bill, the economic recovery bill, got a tax cut.
  We have helped small businesses grow and hire more workers in the 
last bill we passed dealing with jobs. And we would have been happy to 
do more, but we get stalled every time we try to do something. Remember 
that bill? We had four things in it:
  We extended the highway bill for a year. That saved a million jobs in 
America. Hundreds and hundreds of jobs were saved in Nevada. Thousands 
were saved in Minnesota, the Presiding Officer's State.
  In that same legislation, we said that if a small business wants to 
buy something for their business--let's assume they need a new vehicle 
or equipment of any kind--they didn't have to even depreciate it 
anymore; that up to $250,000 they can write off. That was to help small 
business.
  We also said that if someone is out of work for 60 days and someone 
is willing to give them a job for 30 hours a week--we didn't set how 
much they would have to be paid, but if they give them a job for 30 
hours a week, then that employer doesn't have to pay the withholding 
tax, and at the end of that year, they get a $1,000 tax credit.
  In addition to that, we decided that one of the things that worked so 
well in the recovery bill was Build America Bonds. That was very 
successful and so popular that we ran out of money. In this little jobs 
bill, we funded that again. Right now, as we speak, there are jobs all 
over America taking place as a result of what we did with that bill.
  So we have done a lot of things to help small businesses. We have in 
that bill and we tried yesterday to give our States the critical aid 
they need to keep firefighters in our communities, police officers on 
the streets, and teachers in the classrooms. But Republicans said: No. 
Let the States handle their own problems. We have problems back here; 
don't worry about the States.
  I learned a long time ago in college that one of our responsibilities 
back here as a Congress is to do things for the States they can't do 
for themselves. That is what we are doing here. But the Republicans 
said no yesterday. And it wasn't the majority of them, it was every 
single one of them.
  We have worked hard to protect doctors who treat senior citizens from 
a massive pay cut created by the Republicans when they were in charge. 
Now there are going to be seniors who won't be able to find their 
doctor of choice because the doctors simply can't afford to work under 
what the Republicans decided they should be paid. They will take a pay 
cut. They will only get 79 percent of the money they got yesterday for 
the same treatment.
  As part of our agenda this year--and I am not going to go through it 
all because Norm Ornstein, a famous journalist, said we have been the 
most productive Congress in the history of the country, in spite of 
what was going on here, despite the secret holds, the filibusters, the 
stalling, the delay; according to Norm Ornstein and others, the most 
productive Congress in the history of the country.
  As part of our agenda we believe we should hold BP accountable for 
the sickening environmental disaster caused by its own gross negligence 
and maybe criminal activity in the endless pursuit of profits. One of 
the richest companies in the world cut corners so they could make more 
money.
  Those are a few of the things we stand for. We stand for those things 
because we know we work for families, taxpayers, and hard-working 
Americans. But as far as I can tell, the only thing Republicans stand 
for is standing together. As far as anyone can see, Republicans come to 
work each day to fight for their special-interest friends, for 
corporate America, for multimillionaires, for billionaires, and for 
greedy CEOs who ship jobs out of

[[Page S5143]]

America. Remember, part of the legislation they turned down yesterday 
was going to stop all of that.
  The trends are unmistakable. The records are public. I am not making 
up a thing. They are public, and numbers do not lie. It is not hard to 
piece together the puzzle and see who is working for the American 
people and who is working against them.
  But you do not have to comb through voting records; just look at what 
happened yesterday. In the morning Republicans apologized to BP. Listen 
to this. Republicans apologized to BP. One of the longstanding 
Republican leaders in the House of Representatives said he was sorry 
that President Obama had asked them to come up with $20 billion. We 
wrote a letter to BP. The idea started with us, Democratic Senators. 
The President picked this up. He met with the head of BP and they said 
OK, we will do that. The Republicans in the House said it was a 
shakedown and they were embarrassed for our country that this had 
happened. Try that one on. Whose side are the Republicans on?
  I heard an interview where a man said 9/11 did not ruin my business, 
Katrina didn't ruin my business, but the oilspill has ruined my 
business. I filed bankruptcy yesterday. And it is a shakedown?
  I repeat, yesterday morning Republicans apologized to BP for holding 
them accountable for their own recklessness and their own greed. I 
repeat that because it is incredible: Republicans apologized to BP 
because we are making sure it pays for its mess and the taxpayers do 
not have to pay for their mess.
  In the evening Republicans voted to help the wealthiest of the 
wealthy avoiding paying their fair share of taxes, while at the same 
time voting against giving out-of-work Americans the assistance they 
need.
  I have friends who are billionaires. They run these big companies. 
With rare exception, they have come to me and said yes, we have a 
pretty good deal. Do you know why it is a pretty good deal? Because 
they pay less taxes than somebody who works for the minimum wage. The 
Republicans are going to continue to allow my friends, and billionaires 
around the country, to continue to pay less taxes than someone who 
works for minimum wage. What kind of a picture is that?
  Their priorities are baffling to me. They are indefensible. But it is 
even harder to believe when you look at who got us into this mess and 
who is now refusing to let us get out of this mess. The same people. 
Why are the doctors getting a 21-percent pay cut? It is because of what 
they did over here. Why are so many people out of work? It is because 
of the policies of the prior administration--it is what went on on Wall 
Street, cutting the legs off of the American economy. So the people who 
got us into the mess are the ones who are doing everything they can to 
make sure that we do not get out of the mess.
  If not for the years of failed Republican policies, high unemployment 
would not be an issue in the first place. If not for the Republican 
failed policies, there would not be a doctors payment problem in the 
first place. If not for the Republicans' disdain for sensible 
oversight, the disasters from Wall Street to the Gulf of Mexico, to 
communities across America, might not have been so devastating. And if 
not for the weeks and weeks of Republican delay, the emergencies in our 
households and businesses and big cities and small towns wouldn't be 
nearly as bad as they are.
  Republicans might be willing to turn their backs on out-of-work 
Americans but Democrats are not. We are not. We are going to keep 
fighting for them. We are not going to give up.
  As I said earlier, the American people have had it with those who 
create messes and then refuse to take responsibility for cleaning them 
up. That goes for BP and the GOP.
  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.
  Mr. INHOFE. Mr. 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.

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