[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 32 (Friday, March 4, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S1247]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SPENDING CUTS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, thank you. I have a longer statement that I
will give after we finish this colloquy.
At 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, we met in the Vice President's
office. It was a very fine meeting. Vice President Biden was there. My
friend, the Republican leader, me, the Speaker, and the minority leader
of the House were there--McConnell, Reid, Boehner, and Pelosi. We spent
about an hour there.
The arrangement was that we would have a vote on H.R. 1 sometime next
week and also a vote on the bill that we have just laid down, which is
our alternative as to what we think should be done with the economy. I
know our bill--because it is the way we have to do things here--is a
long bill, and I am sure the minority wants to spend some time looking
at that. But one way or the other we will either do it with an
agreement or through my filing different procedural motions. We will
get to a point next week where we will vote on H.R. 1, which we
Democrats want to do. We will vote on the bill. Anyway, it has been
here for a while. Whatever the number it is, it is a Democratic
alternative, which Senator Inouye laid down.
We believe, and I am confident that the Speaker feels the same way,
that we should vote on H.R. 1, which we have had calls for voting on
for more than a week now. I have had statements from the press: Why
doesn't Reid set up a vote on H.R. 1? We will either do that with a
unanimous consent agreement with my friend, the Republican leader, or
we will do it through a procedural motion that I will file later today.
The amendment to that bill is No. 149, and that is Senator Inouye's.
It cuts some $51 billion from what the President's budget was.
To move the process forward, I think this is a place to start. We
have some confidence that we will get votes on our bill, and we will
move this matter forward. Regardless, if H.R. 1 does not pass--and it
will not pass--and if ours does not pass, we at least know where we
stand to move this ball down the road a little further.
The Speaker said that would allow the negotiations to start. I am
paraphrasing, but that is about what he said. That is what all of us in
the room decided to do yesterday.
Today I seek to set those two votes for Tuesday afternoon: one vote
on passing H.R. 1, as it came over from the House, and after that we
would have a vote on passing the alternative, which Chairman Inouye has
drafted and is amendment No. 149. Once we get that, it would seem a
fair proposition to move forward.
As I said, I know my friend, the Republican leader, has a scheduling
problem. I understand that. I would have liked to have come in earlier
today, and so would he, but we were not able to do that. I will give a
more full explanatory statement in a few minutes.
Unanimous Consent Requests--H.R. 1
But right now, I ask unanimous consent that upon disposition of S.
23, which is the patent bill, the Senate proceed to the consideration
of Calendar No. 14, H.R. 1, the Defense appropriations long-term
continuing resolution for fiscal year 2011; that Senator Reid be
recognized to offer a substitute amendment, the text of which is at the
desk; that there be 4 hours of debate equally divided between the two
leaders or their designees prior to a vote in relation to the
substitute amendment; that upon disposition of the substitute
amendment, the Senate proceed to vote on H.R. 1, as amended, if
amended, with no intervening action or debate; that no motions or
amendments be in order to the substitute amendment or to the bill prior
to the votes; that the substitute amendment and the bill be subject to
a 60-vote threshold; and that if H.R. 1, as amended, if amended, does
not achieve 60 affirmative votes, it be returned to the calendar.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. McCONNELL. Reserving the right to object, and for the short term
I am going to object today, we received this 350-page amendment at
11:45. We need a chance over the weekend to take a look at what our
friends have offered. It could well be by Monday we will conclude this
proposal the majority leader has laid out as the best way to go
forward. We will continue to talk about that over the weekend. But for
today I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that upon
disposition of S. 23, the patent bill, the Senate proceed to H.R. 1,
the Defense appropriations long-term continuing resolution for fiscal
year 2011.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. McCONNELL. For the same reason, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
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