[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 51 (Friday, April 8, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2287-S2288]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGET NEGOTIATIONS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I have been married for a long time--more
than 50 years. My wife and I have one daughter and nine grandchildren.
I love these women very, very much. One day, though, I may not be able
to help them, and one of them may need a cancer screening. It is not a
pleasant thought, but that is the reality of life--that I may not be
around to help them when they need something.
Over their lives, they will be in need of other things, such as a
cholesterol check, maybe a blood pressure screening--tests that are
less serious but just as important to a woman's health. They should be
able to get the test that can save their life. So should every single
woman in America. I believe that and, frankly, that is not so
controversial. It is not so controversial a belief.
Some women, of course, have doctors. Others, including many of the
poorest among us, don't. So where do they go to get a blood pressure,
cholesterol, or cancer screening? Where do they go? Thankfully, there
is a little-known part of a little-known law that saves many lives. It
is called title X, and it is part of a public health law. It means
women and girls can go to their
[[Page S2288]]
local health department or community clinic and get these tests. More
than 5 million women use these centers for title X coverage every
year--5 million--and one of them could be my granddaughter or my
daughter.
Mr. President, some watching us today--and we know the whole world is
watching us today--may be asking why I am talking about women's health
when the question before us is the budget of the biggest economy on the
planet Earth. Some may ask why we are talking about the smallest corner
of planet Earth. With a government shutdown looming not weeks away or
days away but hours away, why are we talking about whether women can
get something as simple and noncontroversial as a cancer screening? The
answer is that Republicans want to shut down our Nation's government
because they want to make it harder for women to get the health
services they need.
By the way, title X does not include abortion. It is illegal to use
Federal funds for abortion services. So anyone who says this debate is
over abortion isn't being truthful. It is about simple and important
health services. Republicans want to shut down the government because
they think there is nothing more important than keeping women from
getting cancer screenings. This is indefensible, and everyone should be
outraged--men and women should be outraged. The Republican House
leadership has only a few hours left to look in the mirror, snap out of
it, and realize how positively shameful that would be.
For months, this conversation has been about billions and trillions
of dollars. It has been about weighty issues and difficult decisions.
This debate is about saving money--or that is what we thought it was
about. But no longer. We have an agreement on the cuts and savings. I
was there at the White House last night. That agreement includes a
historic level of cuts. We have always recognized we had to make cuts.
That is why we agreed at the White House last night to make significant
cuts--hard but important.
But now the tea party--among others, although they are the biggest
push--is trying to move its extreme social agenda on issues that have
nothing to do with funding the government. They are willing, it
appears, clearly, to throw women under the bus even if it means they
will shut down the government because that is where we are. That is the
one issue that was remaining last night. That agenda is an extreme
agenda. I don't agree with their ideas on social policy, but in our
democracy, those ideas, however radical or however you may disagree
with them, deserve a debate if they want one. That is fair. But that
debate doesn't belong in an urgent bill to keep the government running,
and it especially doesn't belong here at this late hour.
The consequences of letting our country's funding expire will be
devastating. There are almost 1 million Federal employees. These are
people who work for the Bureau of Land Management, which doesn't have a
big presence in the Presiding Officer's State but has a huge presence
in Nevada. The State of Nevada is 87 percent owned by the Federal
Government. There are Forest Service employees, FBI employees, Internal
Revenue Service employees, and the people who work in this great
government complex--almost 1 million of them--who are waiting on pins
and needles.
Federal employees are like everybody else. They are working from
paycheck to paycheck. They are wondering if they are going to be able
to get that new car they have needed for 3 or 4 years. They are
wondering, with summer coming, if they are going to be able to take
that vacation they have wanted to take for a long time. Federal
employees are like everybody else.
The consequences of letting our country's funding expire would be
devastating to people, individuals, and it would be devastating to our
troops, to our small businesses, and to Americans' everyday lives--
people who just want to get a home loan or get their tax refund or, I
repeat, get their paycheck. A government shutdown would damage our
image and credibility around the world. But Republicans are asking me
to sacrifice my wife's health, my daughter's health, and my nine
granddaughters' health. They are asking me to sacrifice the health of
women in Nevada and all across this country. But I am not going to be
part of that. I won't do it. As a legislator, I am very frustrated. As
an American, I am appalled. As a husband, a father, and a grandfather,
I am personally offended.
Would the Chair announce morning business now, please.
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