[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 132 (Thursday, September 8, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5969]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOUSE CONGRESSIONAL PAGES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, tonight is a very historic joint session
of Congress. Indeed, it is unique in the history of our Nation.
Not because it was the first time a President's request had been
refused by the Speaker. No. Or that the President's speech, in and of
itself, is somehow going to be extraordinary, although we all hope that
it is.
This event is historic because for the first time in two centuries,
there will be no young House pages in attendance when the President
takes the podium behind me. There will be no sea of young men and women
in blue blazers with bright faces intent on shaking the President's
hand and drinking in the ceremony and the significance of a joint
session of Congress.
This is sad on so many levels, especially as a symbol of why Congress
is held in such low esteem. Many here understand the cost of a program
but fail to understand its value.
Dedicated staff were dismissed without notice in a decision that was
announced via press release without a chance for the people who care
passionately about the program to argue for its future or help pay for
it. It may save a few million dollars, but we lose the opportunity to
enrich thousands of lives whose influence and contributions have spread
across the decades and across America, while strengthening and
uplifting this institution. This is part of a disturbing trend here in
Congress, devaluing youth and civic education.
Also scheduled for elimination is the Classroom Law Project sponsored
``We the People'' program and the national high school Constitution
competition that takes place every year all across the country. This is
at a time when our friend, the esteemed documentary producer, Ken
Burns, points out that the average teenager can name eight kinds of
blue jeans but can't name eight American Presidents. Yet Federal
support for civic education is not on the radar screen here in
Washington, D.C.
This is not really any different than the other basic infrastructure
that is falling victim to reckless budget knives and congressional
indifference. The young people who participate in the page program and
the Classroom Law Project could easily construct a path forward for
this Congress and the President.
These young people would craft a path forward that featured a
balanced and fair revenue system that would raise revenue and reduce
the deficit. They would accelerate health care reform, not put sand in
the gears. They would right-size and redirect our military involvement,
and they would reform agricultural programs to help more family farms
and ranchers while saving money.
These alumni could figure it out, while those who control the levers
of power in the House pursue an extreme agenda that is not what America
needs or what Americans want. These young people, the pages, may not be
in attendance here this evening, but their absence speaks volumes about
political dysfunction and a shortsighted agenda.
I hope we will all listen to them.
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