[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 141 (Wednesday, September 21, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6304-H6314]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROVIDING FOR CONSIDERATION OF SENATE AMENDMENT TO H.R. 2608,
CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2012
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, by direction of the Committee on Rules, I
call up House Resolution 405 and ask for its immediate consideration.
The Clerk read the resolution, as follows:
H. Res. 405
Resolved, That upon adoption of this resolution it shall be
in order to take from the Speaker's table the bill (H.R.
2608) to provide for an additional temporary extension of
programs under the Small Business Act and the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958, and for other purposes, with the
Senate amendment thereto, and to consider in the House,
without intervention of any point of order, a motion offered
by the chair of the Committee on Appropriations or his
designee that the House concur in the Senate amendment with
the amendment printed in the report of the Committee on Rules
accompanying this resolution. The Senate amendment and the
motion shall be considered as read. The motion shall be
debatable for one hour equally divided and controlled by the
chair and ranking minority member of the Committee on
Appropriations. The previous question shall be considered as
ordered on the motion to its adoption without intervening
motion.
Sec. 2. House Resolution 399 is laid on the table.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Georgia is recognized for
1 hour.
Mr. WOODALL. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
For the purpose of debate only, I yield the customary 30 minutes to
the gentlelady from New York (Ms. Slaughter), pending which I yield
myself such time as I may consume. During consideration of this
resolution, all time is yielded for the purpose of debate only.
General Leave
Mr. WOODALL. I ask unanimous consent that all Members may have 5
legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Georgia?
There was no objection.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, House Resolution 405 provides for a closed
rule for the consideration of H.R. 2608. It's a temporary continuing
resolution that will fund the operations of the
[[Page H6305]]
United States Government through November 18 of this year. It is
important to note that the funding levels in this CR are the very same
fiscally responsible levels that this Congress and President Barack
Obama approved in the Budget Control Act just 1 month ago. This is not
a departure from our path of restoring fiscal sanity, Mr. Speaker. We
are committed to continuing on that path. But, unfortunately, the
actions of the other body leave us no choice but to consider this
continuing resolution today.
I take no pride, Mr. Speaker, in sharing with you--actually, that's
not true. That's not true at all. I take great pride in sharing with
you what the House has done over the last 6 months, 7 months, 8 months;
but I take no pride at all in pointing out what has not happened on the
other end of this Capitol to do the work that needs to be done.
Constitutionally, we are required to fund the operations of the
government. June 2 of this year, the House passed the Homeland Security
appropriations bill. To date, the Senate has not.
On June 14 of this year, the House passed the Military Construction
and Veterans Affairs bill. This is the one bill that our friends in the
Senate have passed as well.
June 16, the House passed the Agriculture appropriations bill. To
date, the Senate has taken no action at all.
July 15, the House passed the Energy and Water appropriations bill.
To date, the Senate has not.
July 22, the House passed the Legislative Branch appropriations bill.
To date, the Senate has not.
Mr. Speaker, I did not run for Congress last November, I did not show
up here as a freshman to continue business as usual, passing continuing
resolution after continuing resolution after continuing resolution. And
I know my friends on both sides of the aisle believe that's a process
which has long since exceeded its usefulness.
I am so proud that we as a body have begun to pass those
appropriations bills one by one by one. And what have we gotten because
of that? We've gotten oversight. We've had the opportunity to discuss
line by line by line what are our priorities as the House. Now, those
priorities differ from time to time between my friends on the
Democratic side of the aisle and my friends on the Republican side of
the aisle, but we have an opportunity at least to discuss those
priorities.
When the other body fails to pass the appropriations bills, what
choices do we have left? What choices are available to me as a new
freshman Member of the House? I could choose to abrogate
responsibility. I could choose to say no. No, we're just going to wait,
and if the Senate fails to act, then so be it. Let the government shut
down and let the chips fall where they may. That's not the kind of
operation I want to run. That's not why I came to the United States
Congress. I came to the United States Congress because this is the
people's House. This is where thoughtful discussion of the people's
priorities takes place.
What brings me to the floor today is to consider this continuing
resolution that for just 1\1/2\ short months, through November 18, will
extend the operations of the government so we can continue that
thoughtful discussion that I know so many of the Members here came for.
With that, I urge my colleagues to thoughtfully consider this rule
today, thoughtfully consider the underlying bill; and I reserve the
balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I thank my colleague for yielding me the customary 30
minutes, and I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr. Speaker, we are here today because our colleagues in the
Republican majority have failed. They failed the most basic
responsibility of this institution, as my colleague has mentioned, to
pass regular and routine bills to keep the government's doors open, to
keep retirement checks in the mail, and vital government services
available to the American people.
In a few days the fiscal year will end; and without a stopgap
measure, funding for essential government services will run out.
Despite 9 months of claims from the Republican majority that things
have changed and despite a pledge to America that promised a different
Washington, and despite endless calls for a regular appropriations
process, not a single appropriations bill has been enacted for the
upcoming fiscal year which begins October 1.
Throughout this failed process, the majority has blamed everyone but
themselves. They have pointed fingers at President Obama, complained
about our colleagues in the Senate, and blamed the Washington status
quo that they say they can't control. Throughout the process, the one
group of people they won't lay responsibility with is themselves.
After 9 months with not a single bill successfully making its way
through Congress, finger-pointing rings hollow. Not only has no
appropriations bill been enacted, but half of the necessary
appropriations bills haven't even been brought to the floor for a vote.
The majority controls this body and has used their powers to pursue
sideshow legislation and dangerous games of default, but they can't
schedule a vote for the most fundamental pieces of legislation that we
consider every year.
As I stand here today to vote on a billion-dollar Band-Aid that will
allow us to scrape by until November, the hope is by November the
majority will be able to do the job they failed to do all year. Growing
up, every child hopes for such a homework extension. By the time we are
elected to Congress, however, we should know that our work must be
handed in on time.
{time} 1400
Sadly, today's legislation isn't even the biggest failure of
leadership that we are facing in the House. If the press reports are
accurate, we may be headed for an even bigger failure in November. In
recent days, reports have surfaced that the majority plans to fund the
entire Federal Government with one massive, trillion-dollar omnibus
bill.
This bill would explicitly break a promise that the Republican
majority made to the American people. In the Pledge to America, their
leadership included a goal entitled ``advance legislative issues one at
a time.'' In the document they explain, ``we will end the practice of
packaging unpopular bills with must-pass legislation to circumvent the
will of the American people. Instead, we will pass major legislation
one issue at a time.''
During a speech at the American Enterprise Institute in 2010, Speaker
Boehner affirmed the need to consider appropriations legislation one
bill at a time, saying he wanted to do away with the concept of
comprehensive spending bills. On the eve of assuming the majority in
the House, Speaker Boehner elaborated, saying, ``I do not believe that
having 2,000-page bills serves anyone's best interest. Not the House,
not for the Members and not the American people.'' But, if press
reports are correct, a 2,000-page bill or more is what we will get.
Let's be clear. The prospect of omnibus funding is happening for two
simple reasons: First, our colleagues on the other side will not work
in a bipartisan manner. There are no Democrat fingerprints on any bills
that come to the floor to make the compromise necessary to reach
consensus. They continue to pass legislation filled with special
interest favors and ideological pursuits that the American people never
asked for and don't want. As a result, the legislation is built to
fail, and fail it does--over and over again.
Secondly, instead of doing the tough, unglamorous, work of the House,
we have spent most of the time on ideological quests and political
games. Instead of fulfilling the pledge to uphold the Constitution, the
majority has worked to fulfill campaign pledges to Grover Norquist and
the far right. Instead of creating jobs, our colleagues on the other
side have spent months on end pushing a partisan agenda that has
covered everything from the trivial to the very real dangers of
default.
Instead of funding the Department of Energy, the majority has tried
to micromanage our lightbulbs. Instead of funding the Nation's schools,
they tried to eliminate Big Bird. Instead of funding the EPA, they
tried to sell the land surrounding the Grand Canyon to the state-owned
mining companies of Russia and South Korea. Instead of funding cancer
research conducted by the NIH, they have tried, repeatedly, to repeal
health care reform. And instead of setting a responsible budget for the
next fiscal year, they brought our economy to the brink of default and
led to the first-ever downgrade of our Nation's credit.
[[Page H6306]]
Even today, our colleagues on the other side are injecting politics
into a stopgap CR. Today we are considering legislation that will only
provide disaster relief to hurricane victims if billions of dollars are
taken from a successful alternative energy program that has created
39,000 jobs to date and is poised to create 60,000 more. We were told
in the Rules Committee that this was money simply lying there.
In effect, the other side of the aisle is telling the American people
that Congress will either help rebuild shattered communities or
Congress will create new green jobs, but we refuse to do both. This
immoral approach reflects a House of Representatives that is void of
responsible leadership from those in charge.
Today I'll do the little bit that I can to provide leadership sorely
lacking from those in charge. Mr. Speaker, if we can defeat the
previous question at the end of this debate, I will offer an amendment
to the rule to ensure that disaster victims get the help they need. My
amendment will allow Representative Dingell to offer a motion to strike
the unacceptable House language that says all disaster aid must be
offset and substitute the bipartisan Senate approach.
Since 2004, American taxpayers have spent over $3.4 billion on
infrastructure in Afghanistan and even more in Iraq. Not a single one
of those $3.4 billion was held hostage or offset by any program in our
budget. But now, as many Americans are struggling to rebuild and get
their lives back to normal, the majority refuses to help unless they
are allowed to defund a successful program they happen to dislike.
Remember, what this says is that the American public is financing the
reconstruction of Afghanistan and Iraq with taxpayer money, but
taxpayer money without an offset will not be used to help the American
taxpayer. That takes a lot of explaining.
Because the majority decided that pursuing a partisan agenda was more
important than meeting the basic needs of the country, we face the
prospect of a trillion dollar, 1,000-page bill to keep the government
running because the other side will not stop playing politics and start
governing as we are all expected to do. This failure is a disservice to
the American people, an abdication of our responsibilities as
legislators, and a shame to the expectations, responsibilities and
duties of the House.
The majority rode into Washington vowing to change the ways of the
past, but over the last 9 months, the American people have witnessed a
case study in abandoned responsibilities and misguided priorities.
Until the Republican majority begins to govern with responsibility, I
fear this Congress will continue to live up to the low regard our
Nation has for it, which brings shame on us all. I urge my colleagues
on the other side to stop serving their political interests, start
doing bipartisan bills, and start serving our country.
In closing, I urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' on today's rule and
the underlying legislation, and I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I am proud to yield 5 minutes to a
gentleman who has presided over the most open Rules Committee in recent
memory, not just a chairman, but my chairman, the gentleman from
California (Mr. Dreier).
(Mr. DREIER asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. DREIER. I thank my friend for yielding and congratulate him on
his stellar management of this very important rule.
Mr. Speaker, I've been listening to the remarks of my very good
friend and distinguished colleague, the ranking minority member of the
Committee on Rules, the gentlewoman from Rochester, New York (Ms.
Slaughter) and I have to say that as I listen to the remarks, I'm going
to keep my hands to my side. I'm not going to point the finger of blame
at anybody. I'm simply going to state a few facts that I think are
important for all the Members of this House to look at.
It's true, the last 9 months under this Republican majority have been
very difficult, very painful, and very challenging for us as we've been
tackling the challenge of job creation and economic growth. There's a
reason that we have had such a difficult time in the last 9 months here
in this Congress. And the reason is very simple: Last year, for the
first time in nearly three decades since the 1974 Budget and
Impoundment Act was established, we didn't even have a budget proposed
from the then-majority.
And the fact that there was no budget proposed in the last Congress
to deal with the very important spending priorities that we, as a
Nation, needed to address, and the fact that we had not one single
appropriations bill, not one single appropriations bill, completed in
the last Congress--we inherited at the beginning of this year, and
Democrats and Republicans alike will acknowledge it, we inherited a
hell of a mess. It was a big mess that we inherited. And guess what? We
decided that we were going to tackle that mess in a bipartisan way.
My friend who has just talked about the need for bipartisanship, we
began in dealing with the appropriations process with, as Members will
recall, being here for hours and hours and hours because Democrats and
Republicans alike were able to put their mark--their mark--on this
spending bill which we, because of the lack of action in the last
Congress, inherited in this 9 months.
And so my friend is absolutely right. The last 9 months have not been
easy. They've not been easy at all. And I appreciate the fact that she
has worked in a bipartisan way in a number of areas, because as she
knows very well, the bill that we're going to be considering this week,
the regulatory relief bill, we make every amendment that complied with
the rules of the House in order. So many more Democratic amendments
have been made in order than Republican amendments on a number of
pieces of legislation, and that's so that we can do exactly what my
friend has said hasn't happened, and that is work in a bipartisan way.
Now I think that probably the single largest bipartisan achievement
that we've had in this past 9 months has been the agreement that we
came to at the end of July, and that was an agreement that Democrats
and Republicans alike recognized had to be addressed, we needed to
increase the debt ceiling.
{time} 1410
We didn't like the fact that there had been so much spending that had
taken place, but we recognized that it had to be done. So Democrats and
Republicans came together to make that happen.
We have further opportunities for bipartisan agreement coming right
down the pike. Democrats and Republicans, alike, have said we need to
open up new markets around the world for us to create union and
nonunion jobs so that we can export more manufactured products from the
United States of America into these markets. And we have three pending
trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea that will go a
long way towards doing what it is Democrats and Republicans, alike,
want to do.
I'm not going to accuse a single Democrat of not wanting to create
jobs in this country. Everybody wants to make sure that their
constituents aren't hurting, that their constituents aren't losing
their homes, their jobs, their businesses. I know that everybody,
Democrat and Republican, alike, wants to make that happen. We will have
an opportunity, in a bipartisan way, to do just that, Mr. Speaker, when
it comes to these market-opening agreements in these very, very, very
important countries that will help us again create union and nonunion
jobs.
And I think when it comes to the issue of job creation and income
growth, we need to look at the unfortunate mischaracterization that has
been made time and time again of things like the tax cuts that have
enjoyed bipartisan support, what I call the Bush-Obama tax cuts.
First, the '01 tax cuts, I will acknowledge, were not real growth
creators, but the '03 tax cuts generated economic growth that actually
enhanced the flow of revenues to the Federal Treasury. And that's not
my speculation. All one needs to do is simply look at the raw numbers.
In 2003, Mr. Speaker, the Federal Treasury had $1.782 trillion in
revenues from all sources. That was in '03. At the time we saw those
tax cuts put into place, $1.782 trillion in revenues. Up until the
economic downturn in 2007, we saw an increase of 44 percent in the flow
of revenues that came into the
[[Page H6307]]
Federal Treasury to $2.567 trillion. Now, that's an increase, Mr.
Speaker, of $785 billion that came in.
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Bass of New Hampshire). The time of the
gentleman has expired.
Mr. WOODALL. I yield the gentleman an additional 5 minutes.
Mr. DREIER. I thank my friend for yielding.
That, Mr. Speaker, was a 44 percent increase, increasing by $785
billion the flow in revenues from the '03 revenue flow of $1.782
trillion to the '07 revenue flow of $2.567 trillion.
The reason I use these numbers is that we all are focused on job
creation and economic growth. We all know that increased gross domestic
product will go a long way towards dealing with our deficit challenges
and the difficulties that we face. And, Mr. Speaker, what I want us to
do is recognize that, as my friend from Lawrenceville very generously
said, I presided over more open rules than we had in the Republican
Congress in the past and certainly than we had in the 4 years that
preceded this. And I'm proud of that. I'm very proud of the fact that
we've been able to make so many amendments in order that my Democratic
colleagues have offered. We have a Hastings amendment that we made in
order on the bill that we're going to be considering later. I'm happy
that we've done that. We will have a chance to debate these issues and
I hope come to a bipartisan agreement.
Mr. Speaker, I will just say in closing that we have had a difficult
9 months. My friend from Rochester is absolutely right. It's been a
challenging 9 months. And as long as Americans are hurting, it's going
to always be difficult for us here. But being able to establish
priorities, to come together in a bipartisan way, is important.
This measure that we're considering today is being done at the
request of the bipartisan leadership of our colleagues in the other
body who want to be able to move this continuing resolution through as
expeditiously as possible to, as my friend from Lawrenceville said,
recognize that between now and November 18 we simply want to ensure
that the resources are there.
I see my friend from Vermont, and I will say to my friend that I read
and looked at the photographs of the flooding that has taken place in
Vermont. It has been devastating. I've looked at the disasters that
have taken place across this country. My State of California suffers
from earthquakes, fires, flooding, lots of disasters. An earthquake was
felt in this Capitol during the month of August. We know that disasters
occur. We must do everything we can to address those. But calling for
an $8 billion increase in spending beyond the $1.43 trillion that this
continuing resolution calls for is not the answer.
We need to prioritize to ensure that those who are really suffering
can, in fact, have their needs addressed, and I believe that this
House, in a bipartisan way, can and should and, I hope, will do that.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I am pleased to yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Massachusetts, a member of the Rules Committee, Mr. McGovern.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, today the Republican majority has made a
mockery of both the process for and the content of this short-term
continuing resolution.
Over the past several weeks, wildfires, floods, tornados, and
earthquakes have brought tragedy to so many Americans, and, as it
always has, the United States Government is responding with vitally
needed resources and support. The Senate has already passed a disaster
relief bill twice as large as the package contained in this CR and with
the appropriate emergency designation. But House Republican leaders
have decided to cut the Senate amount in half and tie it to an
ideologically driven offset that takes modern technology off the table
for U.S. car and vehicle manufacturers and which could cost thousands
of current and future jobs.
And please don't tell me that it's all about balancing the budget and
ending emergency spending that isn't paid for. The continuing
resolution that we're debating today includes money to continue the
misguided war in Afghanistan to the tune of $10 billion each month.
None of it is paid for, not a penny. It's never been paid for. It's
always been borrowed money that each week adds billions to the deficit.
If my Republican friends believe we don't need to offset billions of
dollars for war, then why are they demanding that we offset disaster
aid for families who were flooded out by a hurricane or whose homes
were burnt to the ground by a wildfire?
Mr. Speaker, we've been in Afghanistan for 10 years. We know how much
it costs. Its funding is as predictable as it gets, yet each and every
year money for the war receives a so-called ``emergency'' designation,
but responding to unpredictable natural disasters does not? It makes no
sense. And if the Republican leadership has figured out a way to
accurately predict the next tornado or earthquake, I would like to hear
it.
The American people are tired of the hypocrisy and tired of the
Republican priorities that make it easier to invest overseas and nearly
impossible to help people here at home.
I urge my Republican friends to put the American people first. I urge
my colleagues to oppose this closed rule and oppose the underlying
bill.
Mr. WOODALL. I reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Levin), the distinguished ranking member
of the Committee on Ways and Means.
(Mr. LEVIN asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. LEVIN. We've heard a lot of rhetoric the first 10 minutes, or
whatever, on the majority side, but rhetoric cannot mask, cannot
obscure reality. The reality is this is an antijobs bill.
In '07, we put forth the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing
loan program. It has worked. Tens of thousands of jobs have been
created as a result of that program in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio,
Indiana, Louisiana, and Florida. And so now the majority says they're
going to pay for this bill. How? By ending a program that has created
jobs. That's the reality. It cuts it off, even though there are
applications pending that will create thousands of more jobs in the
manufacturing base of this country, in Indiana, Missouri, Ohio,
California, Michigan, and other States.
It's inexcusable. It's inexcusable.
Mr. WOODALL. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. LEVIN. I yield to the gentleman from Georgia.
Mr. WOODALL. I appreciate the gentleman yielding.
You may have some information that we did not have in the Rules
Committee. My understanding is that this program, which has billions
that were appropriated in 2008 and have not yet been spent, not only
can----
Mr. LEVIN. You've been misinformed. There are millions and millions
of dollars that are already in the pipeline to be spent and
applications for the balance of that money. That's a fact.
{time} 1420
So if you've been misinformed, I suggest that you go back to the
Rules Committee and take another look at this. This is an anti-jobs
bill when we need jobs in the United States of America.
Announcement by the Speaker Pro Tempore
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair will remind Members to direct
their remarks to the Chair.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume
to speak to what's inexcusable here. And I hate that that's where we
have to end up.
The truth of the matter is what we have down here today is the re-
litigation of something that we already litigated in July and August,
and that is that this bill today funds just until November 18 at the
level that we, as a body, agreed to. You may not like it, I may not
like it, but we agreed to it: a level that's 1043, $1.043 trillion.
That's a big number. That is a big number.
This resolution today, this continuing resolution to get us through
November 18, does not re-litigate that decision. We spent a lot of time
on that in July and August, and again, we come from different places on
whether or not that's the right number. I probably say it's too high,
you may say it's
[[Page H6308]]
too low, but this is simply a resolution that implements the will of
this House.
Mr. LEVIN. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I would be happy to yield to my friend.
Mr. LEVIN. There is nothing in that decision, nothing in that action
that paid for a continuing resolution that will take away jobs from the
businesses and workers of the United States of America, purely and
simply.
Mr. WOODALL. Reclaiming my time from my friend, you're absolutely
right that this bill does not define where those $1.043 trillion go,
and I take issue with that too.
I go back to what you called rhetoric, the 10 minutes that we spent
at the beginning where we went through line by line to talk about,
golly, the work I'm so proud of that you and I have done together, the
individual appropriations bills that you and I have worked through
together, doing what was supposed to be done in this House. That was
the time to do these things, one by one, and, golly, we did. We did.
Mr. LEVIN. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I would be happy to yield to my friend.
Mr. LEVIN. So now you're saying we're paying for it by taking away
jobs from businesses and workers. That's what this does. You can't hide
that fact.
Mr. WOODALL. Reclaiming my time, as I'm not the chairman of the
committee, I will quote the chairman of the committee, who tells us
that not only can we use this offset here today, but there remains not
millions, but billions of dollars in the account to be used for this
purpose; dollars that were appropriated, Mr. Speaker, in 2008, 3 years
ago. They remain unspent, but we leave them there just in case. Just in
case.
And what I would say to my friend is, if we can just get around to
doing this process right again, and I have great hope that we can, if
we can get back to doing the process right, we'll have this discussion
not on a $1.043 trillion continuing resolution, and not even on a half-
trillion dollar continuing resolution, but on the Energy and Water
appropriations bill. We'll be able to get back to it, and I have that
great wish for this House, Mr. Speaker.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I want to yield myself 10 seconds to say
that I said in my opening statement that this program has already
yielded 39,000 jobs, on its way to 60,000, which will not be able to be
met because you are using this as the offset.
I am happy to yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr.
Pascrell), who suffered great damage in the hurricane.
Mr. PASCRELL. Look, we're all Americans. We're not Democrats,
Republicans.
You had 5,000 people evacuated in my district. When you see the
damage in small towns and large towns, then you can appreciate it. The
President came, the Governor of the State, who is not of my persuasion,
came. They saw it firsthand. Homeland Security came. Mr. Fugate from
FEMA came. They saw it firsthand. The damage is deep, and it's not
going to be taken away and remedied within 2 weeks, 2 months, or 2
years because the ground was so saturated that trees fell without any
wind, and are still falling.
Now, we are only one of 51 districts affected in 15 States, and we're
talking about over 30 million people. And for the first time since I've
been a Member of Congress, the other side, your side, wants to make
this conditional, the aid, so that we carve out from either this
program or that program, which is immaterial at this point, the money
to help these very people.
The estimates are very clear as to how much this is going to cost,
beyond our wildest dreams. We don't stop and ask those folks in Joplin,
who had a huge tornado, where 160 people were killed, we don't say,
wait till we go and rob Peter in order to respond to your emergency.
The fires in Texas--we have never done this on an emergency. This is
an absolute disgrace because we're all Americans. We're not Democrats
or Republicans.
Why didn't we do this, for crying out loud, in 2001 when we went to
war? We didn't say, let's take from this program or that program. That
was an emergency. We came up with the money and we sure as hell didn't
pay for it, did we? And now look where we are economically.
We're talking about an emergency in our own country here, in our own
neighborhoods. We need both sides to come together, and that's why we
formed the coalition of Democrats and Republicans. And Republicans are
not going to vote for this either. I'm telling you right now. So why
don't we come together. They passed a clean bill in the Senate.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I yield the gentleman another 10 seconds.
Mr. PASCRELL. This coalition is going to stay strong because America
is more important than either party, and we need to help our brothers
and sisters who are hurting right now, many that will not return to
their homes. They can't. Think about that.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, to correct what may be a misunderstanding
about the swiftness with which this Congress is reacting to those
tragedies, I yield 5 minutes to the chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, who has moved immediately on these issues, the gentleman
from Kentucky (Mr. Rogers).
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
As to the point, Mr. Speaker, of whether or not we offset these
emergency bills, over the last 10 years, we have used offsets in over
half of the emergency spending bills and supplementals, over half, 15
of 30, actually, including war supplementals, emergency supplementals,
military construction, defense supplementals, disaster relief and
recovery, in 2008, for example, and on and on.
Using offsets to pay for disaster relief is the rule here. This is
not an exception. And we're only offsetting $1 billion of it. In fact,
when the Homeland Security bill passed a few months ago, it included
this very offset, and the bill passed by bipartisan support throughout
the body. You've already voted for this, and, I might add,
successfully.
Now, on that green car fund--I'm going to call it that--there's over
$4 billion this minute sitting idle in that account, and it's been
sitting idle for 3 years. The $1.5 billion rescission in subsidies we
propose will not have a significant impact on the program, contrary to
what some people say. All applications for those loans in late-term
stages and negotiations will not be affected. Talk to the agency
downtown, which we have. They will not be affected.
The factory in Michigan or Indiana will not be affected. In total,
eight pending applications for loan guarantees totaling over $6 billion
will not be impacted by this offset. Michigan has the largest stake:
four applications totaling $4.7 billion in loan guarantees, which are
free and clear.
{time} 1430
Other States with applications in the queue that are safe from this
round of cuts include Indiana and Louisiana.
Now, Mr. Speaker, this bill contains $3.65 billion for immediate
disaster relief, which our people need and deserve. As this bill works
its way through the process until November 18, no doubt FEMA will have
by then completed their surveys and investigations of disasters and can
tell Congress, through the White House, how much more money is needed;
and we'll provide it. It's covered in the debt ceiling bill that passed
this body a few weeks ago.
I'm telling you the Appropriations Committee will provide whatever
relief is required when we get the documentation, which is traditional,
as all of the Members of this body know because they helped prepare
those investigations.
So this is a clean bill. This merely extends the time for us to work
with the Senate to perfect a continuing bill for the balance of 2012.
It gives us 5 or 6 weeks, but only 3 or 4 of those weeks will be
available because both bodies will not be here all that time. This is a
clean bill. And it provides disaster relief in the appropriate way. And
there's plenty of money there for the immediate needs that we've been
told about by FEMA.
Mr. Speaker, I urge the adoption of the rule and the underlying bill.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I yield 3 minutes to the gentleman from New York, a
[[Page H6309]]
member of the Committee on Appropriations, Mr. Hinchey.
Mr. HINCHEY. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to the rule and more
broadly to the manner in which the House has dealt with disaster relief
funding.
This year, our country has experienced some of the worst natural
disasters in more than a generation. The cost of Hurricane Irene alone
is estimated to be over $1.5 billion and Tropical Storm Lee's costs are
still being tallied.
Yet despite these overwhelming needs, the disaster aid included in
this bill is grossly inadequate and would not sufficiently help the
millions of Americans who are recent victims of floods, hurricanes,
tornadoes, and wildfires.
My district took a one-two punch from Hurricane Irene and Tropical
Storm Lee. In the southern tier of New York, we've just seen the second
500-year flood in 5 years both in Broome and Tioga counties. Scores of
homes were completely destroyed, and there are over a hundred people
who are still living in an emergency center in Binghamton not knowing
when they'll be able to return to their homes, if they can return ever
at all.
Major companies have been shut down because their facilities are
flooded. The total cost to rebuild the region will likely exceed $250
million.
In the Hudson Valley, Hurricane Irene caused massive power outages
and record flooding. In Ulster County, 60 percent of residents lost
power; seven bridges were destroyed. In fact, two of those bridges were
just washed away and not found.
Vegetable farmers in Ulster, Orange, and Sullivan Counties suffered
devastating losses; and because the crop insurance program remains
wholly inadequate for them, these farmers may get no assistance at all.
Ulster and Orange Counties alone have an estimated $62 million in
agricultural losses. Yet this bill does nothing for these farmers.
And just when some of these communities began building from Irene, a
second round of flooding from Lee washed away much of their hard work.
Now they need to start the recovery work again.
The Senate has already passed a $7 billion standalone disaster bill
that funds the President's FEMA budget request and provides additional
emergency assistance for the Department of Agriculture and other
agencies that are seeing their disaster funds dwindle. This is
absolutely necessary.
This bill that we are dealing with here today is a half job. It's
playing politics with the lives of people who are desperate and are
begging us to set aside games and get this done. Let's put an end to it
now so that we can take up the Senate's bill so that we can adequately
deal with this problem and solve the problems for all of these people
in so many ways.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
To get back on the topic of this continuing resolution today, that
is, this number that we agreed on just a month ago, $1.043 trillion, to
fund the operations of this government.
Mr. Speaker, I go back and I look at emergency requests that this
body has made. Now, I'm a freshman. I was just elected in November,
began my service in January. But over the last 10 years, there have
been 30 emergency and supplemental bills passed.
Now, what I would say to my friends who have been here longer than I
have is perhaps if you have to do it three times a year, it's really
not a surprise. Perhaps we ought to be able to budget for it.
And to his great credit, and to the committee's great credit, and
candidly I would say to the House's great credit, we are trying for the
first time in a long time to say you know what, we can't prevent
tragedy. Tragedy is going to happen. But we can plan ahead for tragedy
so that the American people have the security of knowing the money's
going to be there when they need it.
And when I look, Mr. Speaker, at the way we're pouring money out of
this body, I worry will the money be there when the American people
need it. This budget makes sure that it does.
Mr. HINCHEY. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I yield to the gentleman from New York.
Mr. HINCHEY. Thank you very much. I deeply appreciate it.
The situation that we're dealing with here is critically important.
It's harming huge numbers of people.
What the Senate has done is an adequate solution to this problem.
They've provided the adequate funding that is going to deal with this.
There have been at least seven Republicans over there in the Senate who
supported that bill and voted for it. Why are you not dealing with an
adequate solution to this problem? Why are you insisting on half ways,
not dealing with the kinds of issues that need to be dealt with?
Mr. WOODALL. Reclaiming my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from New York will suspend.
The gentleman from Georgia has the floor.
Mr. WOODALL. I thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Because I hope where my friend was going to go was an acknowledgment
that this process has provided twice the amount of disaster funding
that the President requested, twice that amount in FY11, plus it
forward-funds FY12.
Mr. Speaker, again, I am proud that we are trying to grapple with
these issues. There is not a person on the floor of this House that is
saying ``no'' to Americans in distress. What folks are saying is
``yes'' to making sure that when those distresses come again, we
budgeted for it.
I would now like to yield 2 minutes to my friend, the chairman of the
Appropriations Committee, the gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Rogers).
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Let me just reiterate.
The $1 billion in the fiscal '11 portion of this bill is two times
the amount the President requested. We doubled it. The amount that's in
the bill for fiscal 2012, $2.65 billion, is more than the initial
request that was made to us by the White House. We're here to tell
you--and I've repeated this now four times--whatever the amount is
needed that we see FEMA coming to us requesting, we're going to
provide. Now, we've got until November 18 by this extension, by this
CR, and during that period of time we will get the documentation from
the White House and from FEMA about additional funds that are
requested.
I assure the gentleman from New York who spoke, your concerns will be
addressed during these next few weeks, and the money will be there
that's documented from the White House and from FEMA for disaster
relief. We will not let our people hurt.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I'm going to give myself another second here just to
say I keep hearing that we're all set for next year in the budget, but
who's going to tell Mother Nature just how much we can afford and hope
that we don't get more than that?
I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Andrews).
(Mr. ANDREWS asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
{time} 1440
Mr. ANDREWS. Mr. Speaker, America has had an economic disaster and a
natural disaster. The economic disaster is 15 million people
unemployed, and then we had the natural disasters of August. This bill
tries to help the natural disaster get solved by making the economic
disaster worse. It takes a program that has produced 39,000 private
sector jobs and cripples it.
Now, the ostensible purpose for this is that we want to offset the
spending to help deal with the natural disasters we had around this
country in August; but on multiple occasions in the last 7 years,
different administrations came to the Congress and asked for
infrastructure spending to help rebuild Iraq--$3.7 billion worth of it
to help rebuild Iraq and not a penny of offset.
Ladies and gentlemen, if we can vote to spend the public's money to
rebuild roads and bridges in Iraq, let's not require an offset to
rebuild roads and bridges in New York and Vermont and New Jersey. The
right vote is ``no.'' Rewrite this bill, and do so in a way without
worsening our economic disaster.
Mr. WOODALL. I reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Vermont (Mr. Welch). We watched Route 4 in Vermont crumble like a
cookie in the rain and wash away.
Mr. WELCH. I thank the gentlelady for yielding.
[[Page H6310]]
This bill is not about the offset. This bill is not about whether
we're going to pay for emergency spending. We must and we will. What
this bill is about is whether we're going to help 427 residents of
Pittsfield, Vermont, who were in the wake of the wrath of Hurricane
Irene.
That flood came down and ripped their road to the north and ripped
their road to the south, and the water went in the middle, taking out
homes and taking out public buildings. That's the selectboard--
volunteers. It was that volunteer fire department--volunteers. They
didn't have time to have an argument about offsets. They had to find
out how they could get an excavator in there, and if they didn't have
one, they had to borrow one. They had towns that weren't leveraging
some disputes they might have had about whether they would turn back an
excavator or earthmoving equipment to help them out. They did it. They
had their school running the next day, not because they had a school
that was functional--their kids couldn't even get out. They did one
thing first, and that was to set up school on the green. They set it up
on the green. Two days after this hurricane, the kids were going to
school, and their parents were making them feel secure. They couldn't
get to a passable road for several days. What did they do? They cut a
path through the woods so that, for half a mile, kids could walk and
get to transportation.
Now, they're going to have a tab even if we help them, and they know
they have to pay for it; but, you know, if your neighbor's house is on
fire and if you've got a boundary line dispute, you can use the
leverage of his urgent necessity to get that fire hose and hold off and
get it on condition that he cave--or you can do the right thing.
Every time this Congress has had an opportunity to come to the aid of
your district or mine, we've stepped up. No Vermonter has ever
complained to me that we used his tax dollars to help out in Texas, to
help out in Ohio, to help out on the gulf coast; and we didn't make it
conditional in getting our way--my offset, what might be Afghanistan,
and yours might be some environmental program. We knew that was not the
time to do it. We are in this together.
This Congress has an obligation to the American people. I have an
obligation to the folks in your district, as you do in mine, to do the
right thing when an act of God requires for its remedy an act of
Congress. Let us act, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself 30 seconds just to say that
we have the distinguished Appropriations chairman here on the floor,
who has said, not only have we doubled the President's request here,
but there is a commitment to making the dollars available to everyone
who is in need in these disasters. That's the kind of commitment this
Nation has always made to its citizens. That's the kind of commitment
that this bill continues to make to America's citizens.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Watt).
(Mr. WATT asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. WATT. Mr. Speaker, last Friday, the President signed the patent
reform bill; but before the ink is dry on the patent reform bill, the
agreement that led to the passage of it that all of the fees that are
collected by the Patent and Trademark Office will be used by the Patent
and Trademark Office is reneged on in this continuing resolution.
This is a job-creating bill, an innovation-creating bill, and because
we have been taking the money of the Patent and Trademark Office for
years and diverting it to the general fund, we have, in effect, imposed
a tax on innovation in this country. The appropriators promised us that
they were going to correct this problem, but there is nothing in this
bill to address that promise. I don't see how I can support a
continuing resolution that does not honor the commitment that was made
in our patent reform bill.
Just last Friday, the President signed the America Invents Act (AIA),
a bipartisan bill that promises to stimulate innovation and create jobs
and add fuel to our economy. The AIA created a mechanism for USPTO,
beginning in FY2012, to access all of the fees it collects by allowing
USPTO to notify Congress that the Office will need the excess fees to
support its operations and hire the staff required to reduce the
staggering backlog of patent applications. Now, despite this hard
fought deal--one which I opposed precisely because it depends upon an
annual commitment to honor and implement the deal--the CR before us
fails to put the USPTO on the firm, stable footing we all agreed was
necessary for it to dig out of the backlog, avoid a tax on innovation,
and stimulate job growth.
Under the current CR, for at least 7 weeks the USPTO will be held to
a spending rate based on last year's FY11 appropriations, a rate that
ignores Congress's directive and authorization that the USPTO be able
to use the fees it collects in order to support implementation of the
act and that those funds not be diverted to pay for wars, government
waste and other Federal Government operations. I will resist the
temptation to say, ``I told you so,'' because that would not advance
the debate or solve the serious problem I have identified before and
identify again today. What is most compelling is that ensuring that the
PTO has access to all of its funds costs nothing to the American
taxpayer. It is, therefore, confusing why we are again facing such a
heavy lift to simply give the PTO access to the funds it earns through
its operations. But what is clear to me is that, without a provision to
ensure adequate funding for the PTO, the bill the President just signed
will not serve the important purposes it was designed to serve. This CR
does not provide such funding, and I cannot support the CR. I urge my
colleagues who say they believe in reducing the tax burden on
businesses, large and small, those who fought to ensure that the
independent engines of economic growth run at full throttle, I urge
them to vote no on the rule and against this CR and work to get the
funding the USPTO needs and that this Congress promised it would have.
Mr. WOODALL. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to yield 3 minutes to the
gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Dingell).
(Mr. DINGELL asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. DINGELL. Mr. Speaker, this bill is brought to us by people who
know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. The hard fact of
the matter is they've fought two wars on the credit card. This is one
of the few times that we've ever found that they have required offsets
for emergencies, so now we're trying to fix a bad bill.
I want to make the observation that we have a serious problem. We
have a natural emergency, and we have people who have a lasting
unemployment situation that is going to destroy the country and destroy
families and people in this country.
Having said that, I am baffled as to why we are considering a measure
that is going to cut funding for the Advanced Technology Vehicle
Manufacturing program. This is a loan program that has created or saved
over 40,000 jobs so far, and if it's left alone and not destroyed, as
would be done here, it will create another 10,000 more by year's end.
For all the talk in Washington on that side of the aisle about
creating jobs, we find that they're out to kill jobs again, and killing
ATVM just plain makes no sense. It is going to prevent job creation.
The Economic Policy Institute just released a report that my home State
of Michigan has lost nearly 80,000 jobs to China since 2001, where they
sustain and support their industry and where we do not. If we cripple
this loan program, Michigan and the rest of the country can expect to
lose even more jobs and their ability to compete globally in the 21st
century.
I understand we're living through tough economic times and have to
squeeze every penny to make sure it counts, but I want to remind
everybody here present that there are more applications in the pipeline
than there is money to participate in this particular program. So we
are essentially robbing Peter to pay Paul, but it is going to come at
an enormous cost to the economic future of your constituents and mine.
Now, it comforts me that many of my colleagues have seen through this
rascality and have observed it for what it is. Over 100 of them have
signed on to a letter by my friends Mr. Peters and Ms. Eshoo in
opposition to gutting ATVM.
I urge my colleagues to stand up for what is right by defeating the
previous question and by adopting my amendment. If we can't do that,
let's vote
[[Page H6311]]
this rule down and let's vote this bill down, and let's go about the
Nation's business in a wise and sensible fashion which will create jobs
and not strangle economic opportunity for our people.
I want to thank the distinguished gentlewoman from New York for her
leadership on this matter; but I want to denounce the behavior that I
see on the other side, where they are walking into one of the most
important issues that this country confronts with their eyes completely
closed.
Mr. WOODALL. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr.
Ellison).
{time} 1450
Mr. ELLISON. Mr. Speaker, there is a not-so-thin line between being
frugal and fiscally responsible and then downright cheap and stingy,
and this bill demonstrates the difference.
To say to somebody who was in a disaster, to say to somebody who
might lose everything, where the waters are rising, the fires are
burning, the storms are knocking things down, to say, you know what, we
can only help you if we cut somewhere else, is the most stingy,
shortsighted, poorest form of representative government I have ever
seen. It is outrageous to tell Americans facing disaster that you don't
get any help unless you can find how to squeeze it out somewhere.
Americans help Americans. Americans stand up for each other at time
of crisis. This is a hallmark of who we are, and it doesn't matter
whether you are Republican or Democrat, whether you are from the north,
the south, the east or the west, whether you are black, white, Latino,
wherever you come from, when Americans are in trouble, Americans
respond. And we don't reach inside and say, well, if I can afford it,
we will help you out. We just jump forward and we help out.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. ELLISON. No, I will not yield, and I won't cede any of my time,
so you don't need to ask again.
I am also just absolutely appalled, appalled, that the Republican
bill will cost at least 10,000 good-paying American manufacturing jobs
and perhaps tens of thousands more by cutting the Advanced Technology
Vehicle Manufacturing loan program, which is putting Americans to work
at producing cleaner American cars.
This provision, perhaps more than any other, demonstrates the
fraudulent nature, fraud, fraud, of claiming that the Republicans are
trying to produce jobs. They are not trying to make jobs.
They run around saying that rich people are job creators, they are
profit creators. And you know who is absolutely not a job creator?
Anyone who votes ``yes'' on this bill.
Vote ``no,'' absolutely ``no'' on this bad piece of bill.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I am proud that we have been able to have a
conversation with one another and yield that time throughout the day.
In order to continue that, I yield 1 minute to the chairman, the
gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Rogers).
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Thank you for yielding.
The previous speaker doesn't understand the bill. The $2.65 billion
in the 2012 portion of the bill is not offset, only the portion for
fiscal 2011 is required to be offset. And I would remind the gentleman,
as well as everyone else, many of whom voted for the Homeland Security
bill a few months ago, it included this provision.
The disaster relief money, twice what the President requested of us,
we doubled his request. That part is offset, the fiscal 2011 moneys,
but the bulk of the money in this bill, the $2.65 billion for fiscal
2012, it's not offset. So the gentleman is incorrect.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I am pleased to yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Peters).
Mr. PETERS. Mr. Speaker, I come from the Greater Detroit area, which
has been especially hard hit from this recession.
When many wanted to let the auto industry fail, I stood with
President Obama, and now the Big Three auto companies are once again
earning profits and creating jobs in our region.
Today, however, the House Republicans are trying to pass job-killing
cuts to our auto industry by eliminating section 136 loans. We have the
support of the Big Three auto manufacturers, as well as several labor
unions and environmental groups but, sadly, the Tea Party can't even
say ``yes'' to a program that has created and protected 41,000 jobs. In
fact, according to experts, this program is directly responsible for
bringing manufacturing of the Ford Focus automobile from Mexico to
Michigan, with American workers making the Ford Focus.
We absolutely need to fund disaster relief for communities affected
by the recent natural disasters, but that doesn't mean we need to cause
an economic disaster for our workers.
I urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' on the rule and ``no'' on the
continuing resolution because we need to be working to create more
American manufacturing jobs, not destroying them.
Mr. WOODALL. I reserve the balance of my time.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I yield 1 minute to the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms.
Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, it would seem that we would
come to the floor of the House at this time and celebrate a continuing
resolution in the backdrop of Tropical Storm Lee and Hurricane Irene,
the enormity of the tragedy in Vermont.
I know that my colleagues from that area are in pain and still
suffering from the devastation. I noticed upstate New York, Prattsville
in particular, a city that is full of pain with individuals who are at
loss of why their town is no longer.
But in that instance, as my colleagues know, my Republicans friends
know, although we have had some moments that we have not been proud of,
such as in the gulf region when we were not prepared for Hurricane
Katrina, we have still risen to the occasion thereafter and said to the
American people that if you are in a disaster, this Nation will come to
your aid.
Unfortunately, this CR does not in any way befit the American way,
for here we have a fix that is really a broken fix.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I yield the gentlewoman 1 additional minute.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Rather than declaring disasters what they
are, emergencies, and providing the dollars that we need, we are, in
essence, if I might use the old-fashioned term, nickel and diming our
responsibilities. It is patently unfair to put the American people in
the crosshairs of our politics about having an offset for emergency
funding.
Do you want to tell that, if we look back at 2005 to the thousand-
plus that died in Hurricane Katrina, you have to have an offset? Let's
think about whether we're going to send you any money.
Now, I know that there is a need for this legislation to pass, but
once we concede the idea that the American people will be put in the
pickle of an offset, that means that disaster knocks at your door, not
at your invitation, and the Federal Government, which is, in fact, the
umbrella on a rainy day, it will not be there. I will not be able to
tolerate that.
What we should be doing is passing a CR that declares emergency
funding what it is--to be there for the American people. And this next
thing we should be doing is passing the President's jobs bill, for that
is how we will ensure that we are doing the job that the American
people want.
This CR is a bunch of smoke and mirrors, and I will not tell the
American people that they are second-class citizens. If I can find the
dime to pay for your misery, I will look for the dime. That is not the
American way.
Mr. WOODALL. I yield 1 minute to the chairman of the committee, the
gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Rogers).
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I thank the gentleman for yielding again.
I'll be very brief.
The gentlewoman who just spoke mentioned Katrina and that we should
not offset expenses of emergency disaster spending. In fact, in 2006
that's exactly what we did do. We required offsets for aid for Katrina
and other matters, $33.5 billion in offsets in Katrina aid in 2006. And
then again in 2007, we offset $939 million in offsets for, among other
things, Hurricane Katrina recovery.
As I have said before, over the last 10 years, we have offset more
than half of
[[Page H6312]]
the disaster emergency relief bills we have passed here. It's not
unusual, and the gentlelady is mistaken that we did not request offsets
for Katrina. We did.
Mr. WOODALL. I say to my friend to from New York, I have no more
speakers and am prepared to close.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Speaker, if we defeat the previous question, I will offer an
amendment to the rule to make in order a motion to strike the
unacceptable House disaster funding language and substitute the
bipartisan Senate approach.
I ask unanimous consent to insert the text of the amendment in the
Record along with extraneous material immediately prior to the vote on
the previous question.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentlewoman from New York?
There was no objection.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, I want to urge my colleagues to vote
``no,'' defeat the previous question, and if we are successful in
defeating the previous question and offering our amendment, then we
will get on with the underlying House amendment.
I yield back the balance of my time.
{time} 1500
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the balance of my time.
I think one thing that unites us as Republicans and Democrats, and
actually unites us as Americans, is when we face adversity, we say: Can
we do better? Can we do better? You know, it's one thing to muddle
through, but it's something else to learn from that experience and come
back the next time and do better.
Now, I'm proud to be here as part of a freshman class, Mr. Speaker;
89 new Republican freshmen, 10 new Democratic freshmen. Ninety-nine
Members of this House are brand new this year; 99 Members of this
House. And so we look back. We look back on profligate spending where
even though American families are asked to prioritize their spending
each and every day, for some reason the Congress didn't. Even though
small businesses are asked to prioritize their spending every day, for
some reason Congress didn't.
What this new Congress has done, Mr. Speaker, this 112th Congress has
done, is to say: Can we do better? And the answer is yes. Why are the
American people so cynical about Congress, Mr. Speaker? Why are our
approval ratings in the tank? It was less than 2 months ago, less than
2 months ago we agreed that for next year we should spend $1.43
trillion. And we're already talking about that we've got that number
wrong and we want to spend more. Folks, we have to make those priority
decisions. Thirty times, Mr. Speaker, thirty times in the last 10 years
we came up with emergency spending. Thirty times, Mr. Speaker.
Let me just ask you, the Defense Iraq-Afghanistan supplemental in
2004, is anybody surprised that it took more money in those places than
we had budgeted? Anybody think that's a surprise? I'm not surprised by
that, Mr. Speaker. I wasn't here, but I'm not surprised. What I wish we
could have done was budgeted better for that. Did we know in 2004 that
it was going to take more money? Of course we did. But what did we do?
We gamed that system.
What is this Appropriations Committee doing? What is this
Appropriations Committee doing? They're saying that they know tragedy
is going to befall Americans. They don't know what; they don't know
when; but they know that it's going to happen. And so they're going to
budget for it. Why? Because we tell Americans day after day after day
that programs that they count on might not be there tomorrow. Why?
Because we're broke. We tell Americans every day something that they
might want to do, something they thought might be available, it might
not be available. Why? Because we're broke.
But I agree with my friends on the Democratic side of the aisle, when
folks are facing disaster, they don't want to have to ask that
question. When folks are facing personal tragedy, they don't want to
have to ask that question: Will there be money there? Will there be
help there?
No, in our communities, we know the help is going to be there. We
know our neighbors are going to be there for us, and we know our
families will be there for us. And for the first time in a long time,
Mr. Speaker, we now know that the American Congress is going to be
there, too, because we are changing business as usual.
We asked the question: Can we do better? And the Speaker and the
committee chairmen said, Yes. Yes, we can. I encourage support for the
rule, and I encourage a vote on the underlying resolution.
The material previously referred to by Ms. Slaughter is as follows:
An Amendment to H. Res. 405 Offered by Mrs. Slaughter of New York
At the end of the resolution, add the following new
sections:
Sec. 3. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
resolution, after expiration of debate on the motion to
concur specified in the first section of this resolution it
shall be in order to consider the motion to amend printed in
section 4 of this resolution. That motion may be offered only
by Representative Dingell of Michigan or his designee, shall
be debatable for 20 minutes equally divided and controlled by
the proponent and an opponent, shall not be subject to
amendment, and shall not be subject to a demand for division
of the question. All points of order against that motion are
waived.
Sec. 4. The motion to amend referred to in section 3 is as
follows:
``(1) Strike sections 125 and 126 of the House amendment
(and redesignate the subsequent sections accordingly).
``(2) At the end of the House amendment, before the short
title, insert the following:
``Sec. _ Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
there is hereby enacted into law the provisions of division B
of the amendment adopted by the Senate on September 15, 2011,
to House Joint Resolution 66 (112th Congress), relating to
emergency supplemental disaster relief appropriations.''.
____
(The information contained herein was provided by the
Republican Minority on multiple occasions throughout the
110th and 111th Congresses.)
The Vote on the Previous Question: What It Really Means
This vote, the vote on whether to order the previous
question on a special rule, is not merely a procedural vote.
A vote against ordering the previous question is a vote
against the Republican majority agenda and a vote to allow
the opposition, at least for the moment, to offer an
alternative plan. It is a vote about what the House should be
debating.
Mr. Clarence Cannon's Precedents of the House of
Representatives (VI, 308-311), describes the vote on the
previous question on the rule as ``a motion to direct or
control the consideration of the subject before the House
being made by the Member in charge.'' To defeat the previous
question is to give the opposition a chance to decide the
subject before the House. Cannon cites the Speaker's ruling
of January 13, 1920, to the effect that ``the refusal of the
House to sustain the demand for the previous question passes
the control of the resolution to the opposition'' in order to
offer an amendment. On March 15, 1909, a member of the
majority party offered a rule resolution. The House defeated
the previous question and a member of the opposition rose to
a parliamentary inquiry, asking who was entitled to
recognition. Speaker Joseph G. Cannon (R-Illinois) said:
``The previous question having been refused, the gentleman
from New York, Mr. Fitzgerald, who had asked the gentleman to
yield to him for an amendment, is entitled to the first
recognition.''
Because the vote today may look bad for the Republican
majority they will say ``the vote on the previous question is
simply a vote on whether to proceed to an immediate vote on
adopting the resolution . . . [and] has no substantive
legislative or policy implications whatsoever.'' But that is
not what they have always said. Listen to the Republican
Leadership Manual on the Legislative Process in the United
States House of Representatives, (6th edition, page 135).
Here's how the Republicans describe the previous question
vote in their own manual: ``Although it is generally not
possible to amend the rule because the majority Member
controlling the time will not yield for the purpose of
offering an amendment, the same result may be achieved by
voting down the previous question on the rule . . . When the
motion for the previous question is defeated, control of the
time passes to the Member who led the opposition to ordering
the previous question. That Member, because he then controls
the time, may offer an amendment to the rule, or yield for
the purpose of amendment.''
In Deschler's Procedure in the U.S. House of
Representatives, the subchapter titled ``Amending Special
Rules'' states: ``a refusal to order the previous question on
such a rule [a special rule reported from the Committee on
Rules] opens the resolution to amendment and further
debate.'' (Chapter 21, section 21.2) Section 21.3 continues:
``Upon rejection of the motion for the previous question on a
resolution reported from the Committee on Rules, control
shifts to the Member leading the opposition to the previous
question, who may offer a proper amendment or motion and who
controls the time for debate thereon.''
Clearly, the vote on the previous question on a rule does
have substantive policy implications. It is one of the only
available tools
[[Page H6313]]
for those who oppose the Republican majority's agenda and
allows those with alternative views the opportunity to offer
an alternative plan.
Mr. WOODALL. I yield back the balance of my time, and I move the
previous question on the resolution.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on ordering the previous
question.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the ayes appeared to have it.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 and clause 9 of rule
XX, this 15-minute vote on ordering the previous question will be
followed by 5-minute votes on adoption of House Resolution 405, if
ordered, and suspending the rules with regard to Senate Concurrent
Resolution 28 and S. 846.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 237,
nays 188, not voting 8, as follows:
[Roll No. 715]
YEAS--237
Adams
Aderholt
Akin
Alexander
Amash
Amodei
Austria
Bachus
Barletta
Bartlett
Barton (TX)
Bass (NH)
Benishek
Berg
Biggert
Bilbray
Bilirakis
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Bonner
Bono Mack
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Brooks
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Buerkle
Burgess
Burton (IN)
Calvert
Camp
Campbell
Canseco
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman (CO)
Cole
Conaway
Cravaack
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Davis (KY)
Denham
Dent
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Dold
Dreier
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Emerson
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Flake
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Frelinghuysen
Gallegly
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guinta
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Hayworth
Heck
Hensarling
Herger
Herrera Beutler
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (IL)
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jones
Jordan
Kelly
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kline
Labrador
Lamborn
Lance
Landry
Lankford
Latham
LaTourette
Latta
Lewis (CA)
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Lummis
Lungren, Daniel E.
Mack
Manzullo
Marchant
Marino
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McCotter
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meehan
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Myrick
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paulsen
Pearce
Pence
Petri
Pitts
Platts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Quayle
Reed
Rehberg
Renacci
Ribble
Rigell
Rivera
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross (FL)
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Scalise
Schilling
Schmidt
Schock
Schweikert
Scott (SC)
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stearns
Stivers
Stutzman
Sullivan
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner (NY)
Turner (OH)
Upton
Walberg
Walden
Walsh (IL)
Webster
West
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Young (AK)
Young (FL)
Young (IN)
NAYS--188
Ackerman
Altmire
Andrews
Baldwin
Barrow
Bass (CA)
Becerra
Berkley
Berman
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Boren
Boswell
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardoza
Carnahan
Carney
Carson (IN)
Castor (FL)
Chandler
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke (MI)
Clarke (NY)
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly (VA)
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Costello
Courtney
Critz
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
DeGette
DeLauro
Deutch
Dicks
Dingell
Doggett
Donnelly (IN)
Doyle
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Eshoo
Farr
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Fudge
Garamendi
Gonzalez
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hahn
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heinrich
Higgins
Himes
Hinchey
Hinojosa
Hirono
Hochul
Holden
Holt
Honda
Hoyer
Inslee
Israel
Jackson (IL)
Jackson Lee (TX)
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Kaptur
Keating
Kildee
Kind
Kissell
Kucinich
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren, Zoe
Lowey
Lujan
Lynch
Maloney
Markey
Matheson
Matsui
McCarthy (NY)
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Michaud
Miller (NC)
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (CT)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Olver
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters
Peterson
Pingree (ME)
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Reyes
Richardson
Richmond
Ross (AR)
Rothman (NJ)
Roybal-Allard
Ruppersberger
Rush
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell
Sherman
Shuler
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Stark
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Tonko
Towns
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz (MN)
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Woolsey
Yarmuth
NOT VOTING--8
Baca
Bachmann
Giffords
Lewis (GA)
Luetkemeyer
Paul
Reichert
Sutton
{time} 1530
Messrs. ROTHMAN of New Jersey, LARSON of Connecticut, Ms. FUDGE, and
Mrs. NAPOLITANO changed their vote from ``yea'' to ``nay.''
Mrs. MYRICK changed her vote from ``nay'' to ``yea.''
So the previous question was ordered.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the resolution.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the ayes appeared to have it.
Ms. SLAUGHTER. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. This will be a 5-minute vote.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 238,
nays 185, not voting 10, as follows:
[Roll No. 716]
YEAS--238
Adams
Aderholt
Akin
Alexander
Amash
Amodei
Austria
Bachus
Barletta
Bartlett
Barton (TX)
Bass (NH)
Benishek
Berg
Biggert
Bilbray
Bilirakis
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Bonner
Bono Mack
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Brooks
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Buerkle
Burgess
Burton (IN)
Calvert
Camp
Campbell
Canseco
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman (CO)
Cole
Conaway
Cravaack
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Davis (KY)
Denham
Dent
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Dold
Dreier
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Emerson
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Flake
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Frelinghuysen
Gallegly
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guinta
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Hayworth
Heck
Hensarling
Herger
Herrera Beutler
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (IL)
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jones
Jordan
Kelly
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kissell
Kline
Labrador
Lamborn
Lance
Landry
Lankford
Latham
LaTourette
Latta
Lewis (CA)
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Lungren, Daniel E.
Mack
Manzullo
Marchant
Marino
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McCotter
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meehan
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Myrick
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paulsen
Pearce
Pence
Petri
Pitts
Platts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Quayle
Reed
Rehberg
Renacci
Ribble
Rigell
Rivera
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross (FL)
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Scalise
Schilling
Schmidt
Schock
Schweikert
Scott (SC)
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stearns
Stivers
Stutzman
Sullivan
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner (NY)
Turner (OH)
Upton
Walberg
[[Page H6314]]
Walden
Walsh (IL)
Webster
West
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Young (AK)
Young (FL)
Young (IN)
NAYS--185
Ackerman
Altmire
Andrews
Baldwin
Barrow
Bass (CA)
Becerra
Berkley
Berman
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Boren
Boswell
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardoza
Carnahan
Carney
Carson (IN)
Castor (FL)
Chandler
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke (MI)
Clarke (NY)
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly (VA)
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Costello
Courtney
Critz
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
DeGette
DeLauro
Deutch
Dicks
Dingell
Doggett
Donnelly (IN)
Doyle
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Eshoo
Farr
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Fudge
Garamendi
Gonzalez
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hahn
Hanabusa
Heinrich
Higgins
Himes
Hinchey
Hinojosa
Hirono
Hochul
Holden
Holt
Honda
Hoyer
Inslee
Israel
Jackson (IL)
Jackson Lee (TX)
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Kaptur
Keating
Kildee
Kind
Kucinich
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren, Zoe
Lowey
Lujan
Lynch
Maloney
Markey
Matheson
Matsui
McCarthy (NY)
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Michaud
Miller (NC)
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (CT)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Olver
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters
Peterson
Pingree (ME)
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Reyes
Richardson
Richmond
Ross (AR)
Rothman (NJ)
Roybal-Allard
Ruppersberger
Rush
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell
Sherman
Shuler
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Stark
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Tonko
Towns
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz (MN)
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Wilson (FL)
Woolsey
Yarmuth
NOT VOTING--10
Baca
Bachmann
Giffords
Gingrey (GA)
Hastings (FL)
Lewis (GA)
Paul
Reichert
Sutton
Welch
{time} 1537
Mr. ROKITA changed his vote from ``nay'' to ``yea.''
So the resolution was agreed to.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
____________________