[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 29, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7716-S7717]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST--H.R. 5481
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate
proceed to the immediate consideration of Calendar No. 442, H.R. 5481,
a bill to give subpoena power to the National Commission on the BP
Deepwater Horizon Oilspill and Offshore Drilling; that the bill be read
a third time and passed, and the motion to reconsider be laid upon the
table, with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I will not
object if the Senator would kindly amend her request to include a
substitute amendment with a Barrasso proposal to establish a National
Commission on Outer Continental Shelf Oilspill prevention.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Senator so amend her request?
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I think we should have as many eyes
looking into this issue as possible, and as a member of the Energy
Committee I supported the Barrasso amendment. But the issue before us
today right now is that we already have a bipartisan commission
appointed by the President. The commission is up and running.
The President's commission will issue its report in January, and the
President's commission needs subpoena power to do its job right now.
This was the largest environmental disaster in our country's history.
It is important we get to the bottom of it.
I am disappointed that, once again, we are hearing our colleagues on
the other side of the aisle who are objecting to giving the President's
commission subpoena power.
Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The Senator from New Hampshire.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. The BP oilspill was an unprecedented disaster--lives
were lost, and the gulf region will suffer the environmental and
economic consequences for years to come. We cannot turn back the clock
and stop what happened. But we can prevent future disasters by finding
out exactly what went wrong. We need to investigate this spill, and we
need to make sure it never happens again.
That is why the President appointed a commission to investigate. But
without subpoena power the commission cannot do the job they were
appointed to do.
Already, we have seen reports that some witnesses are stonewalling
the commission. Former Senator Graham and former President Nixon's EPA
Administrator, William Reilly, who are cochairing the President's
commission, told the press yesterday that investigators have
``encountered resistance to full responses to their questions.'' That
is unacceptable. We cannot let BP and Transocean cover up the truth.
The American people deserve answers.
This is the fourth time I have asked for unanimous consent on the
Senate floor to pass a bill giving the BP Oilspill Commission subpoena
power. Unfortunately, as we saw, this is the fourth time the
Republicans in the Senate have objected.
This should be noncontroversial. In the House of Representatives, 169
Republicans voted in favor of this bill in June. It is outrageous that
this simple bill is being obstructed here in the Senate. A thorough
investigation is needed, and it is needed now.
Commission cochairman William Reilly, who used to sit on the board of
ConocoPhillips, even said yesterday that it is ``unjustifiable'' for
Congress
[[Page S7717]]
to not provide the commission with all of the tools they need to
resolve this disaster. I could not agree more. I am totally
disappointed in what we have heard from the other side.
I yield the floor.
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a brief
question? I know my colleague is waiting to speak.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Yes.
Mr. DORGAN. I want to make the point--and then ask a question--this
is probably a fitting description near the end of at least this portion
of this session of the almost total lack of cooperation that exists in
this Chamber. The House of Representatives passed this almost
unanimously. On commissions that are important--the Three Mile Island
Commission, the Commission on 9/11, the Financial Crisis Commission--
they were all given subpoena power. Why? Because you need that if you
are going to force and compel people to produce the records.
I was on the Energy Committee, and we heard the three parties that
were out there drilling in that well site: BP, Transocean, and
Halliburton. They were all involved. All of them were pointing at each
other. The only way this commission can function is with subpoena
power. What on Earth can they be thinking of to block subpoena power
for this commission four successive times?
I would ask the Senator--first of all, I thank the Senator for doing
this. Second, it is unthinkable to me that we see continued blockage.
It represents a complete lack of cooperation. They did not do that in
the House of Representatives. The minority was very interested in
seeing that this works. Here the minority seems very interested in
seeing that the commission cannot work.
I would ask, is this not the fourth occasion on the floor of the
Senate that the Senator has made this request, and on four successive
occasions the minority has objected, in some cases for other--they have
a new excuse each time--but isn't this the case that four times the
Senator has asked for this consent and four times it has been denied?
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Absolutely. I appreciate the Senator from North Dakota
pointing this out, and also pointing out what has been a bipartisan
history in the past when we have dealt with these kinds of disasters
and tragedies in the country, that this used to be a bipartisan effort,
and how sad and disappointing that now it has come down to partisanship
rather than working together.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
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