[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 194 (Friday, December 16, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H9914-H9916]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESS REPRESENTS ALL OF AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker.
Happy holiday to America. Let me reinforce that we live in a great
country, and that is evidenced by the opportunity of Members to come to
this democratic body and the other body to speak about the values of
this Nation and the importance of our democracy and our responsibility
to address the concerns of all Americans. It is good for us to have an
opportunity for a dialogue and to be able to listen to each other.
I know that I'll be joined shortly by the whip of this Congress, Mr.
Hoyer. So let me just quickly say that I remember serving in this
Congress when President Bush was the President, and I always made the
point that once we are elected, even as we come from constituency, even
as we come out of tough political battles, it really is the oath that
we take that ensures that we represent all of America, whether we have
the glory of coming from a State that is claiming progressiveness or
one that is conservative. When we get on that train or airplane or
drive that car and come to Washington, D.C., we represent all of
America.
So let me quickly just say that you're looking at a stack of papers
that represent the approach that my Republican friends took to fund the
needs of the American people. Under the Democratic Caucus and the
Democratic Congress of last Congress, we had the appropriations bills,
almost 12 of them, come to the floor, and Members openly debated all of
the issues around the different bills dealing with transportation,
housing, homeland security and defense. They had an opportunity to be
on the floor. The constituents could email or call or say what is that
in this particular bill. But under this Republican leadership, this is
what they brought us and gave us 1 hour to read these pages because of
the emergency of funding the American people.
That's not a way to run a country. It's not Democratic or Republican.
It's not conservative or liberal. It's just not the way.
And I would offer to say that we're committed and should have done
this weeks ago, extending the payroll tax relief, providing for 160
million working Americans and extending the unemployment, helping 6
million Americans. You see, I don't believe that those Americans care
whether we are conservative Republican, whether we twitter, whether we
email or whether we speak on the floor of the House. They want us to
abide by the oath that we take when we stand and affirm our
relationship with the United States and our obligation and duty to the
American people.
When our soldiers who are coming home now, yesterday being the last
day of war in Iraq, the casing of the colors, not one soldier that I
visited in Iraq or Afghanistan ever put up and said, I'm a Republican
or I'm a Democratic. Every one of them was proud to be an American. And
that's what we are obligated to do on this floor.
{time} 1510
You know, it saddens me to report to you and the American people, my
colleagues, that the banks of America have $64 trillion in their
accounts, refusing to spend it, to yield, to loan it to small
businesses or those who want to buy homes. Our businesses have over
$1.12 trillion in cash on hand.
It saddens me to hear that businesses who are protected by our flag
and our soldiers and can do business in a democratic setting, just
because of wanting more money, they will lift up their business and
take it to another country and remove the employees who invest in this
country. It saddens me.
I ask the simple question: Where there is a benefit, is there not
burden?
And I do want to correct any impression that we tax Americans 90
percent. Yes, we need tax reform, real tax reform. We need to help
Americans keep money in their pockets. But I can tell you, out of $10,
we don't take $9. We want people to be able to work and reap the
benefit of their work.
But may I just share with you that America is an umbrella on a rainy
day, that when there are hurricanes and tornados and earthquakes, you
expect us to come running and restore your communities. You expect us
to take care of the dams and bridges, the highways, to ensure that
America's infrastructure is working, that the electric grid can
withstand a cyberattack, a potential homeland attack, if you will.
After 9/11, you asked America why, and you wanted us to get busy and
get to work and ensure the homeland is protected. And I sit on the
Homeland Security Committee. Every day our responsibility is to read
the fine lines in the classified information to make sure that we are
in front of the terrorists, whether it's a lone wolf or whether it is a
massive attack. We have been fortunate, because of our young men and
women in the military, because of our intelligence community, that we
have not had a major attack on our soil since 9/11. That's what the
government is all about. You cannot throw the baby out with the
bathwater.
And we have some other responsibilities as well. The responsibilities
of ensuring our children are safe and that we don't allow and condone
sexual abuse of our children or bullying of our children. Yes, you can
make a national statement on that, though we want families to get help
and children to get help, but the circus that is going on in Penn State
is so unacceptable.
I've introduced legislation to stop the Federal funding of any entity
that covers up or tolerates child sexual abuse. I have introduced
legislation to make a stand against the bullying and ask communities
and school districts to establish best practices to help our children
and families.
And then it is important to note that we do need to have the harmony
and the collegiate collaboration that really speaks of this grand
place, this august institution of which we've had so many
[[Page H9915]]
opportunities. One of our Members was interviewed in one of our
newspapers here on the Hill, and he spoke eloquently as a protector of
this institution, one who had been here even as a page, and he mourned
for the lack of collegiate interaction.
Everybody thinks it's a joke to call people names; I do not. For we
all come in different shapes, sizes, and colors, and it is unfortunate
that groups get condemned because of their race, because of their sex,
or because of where they come from, their lifestyle, their background,
who they represent, who they come on the floor and attempt to advocate
for. I do not in any way disallow anyone who comes with a different
perspective from one that I may be suggesting today, and that should
not generate name-calling.
And the press loves it. They love to see us name-call against each
other. They make that the story of the day. They don't talk about the
yellow ribbons that Members wore, both Republican and Democrat,
commemorating the return of our soldiers. And I personally thank them
because I came to them and asked them to do so. I thank them--the
Speaker, the leader, the Majority Leader, and of course the whip,
leadership coming together to say thank you to our troops.
Members, why don't we, as we go through our holiday season, turn
ourselves around. Let's not give fodder to the media, who simply likes
to ridicule and make us look as if we're doing nothing. And whether or
not I agree or disagree, I know Members are in their offices or in
their districts and they are responding to the needs of our
constituents.
And as I speak to our constituents back home, as we send this bill to
the President and appropriations come that will help you in housing,
help you in transportation and the environment, it is important for our
local officials--and I look forward to working with my own City of
Houston, let's be responsible in these dollars and make sure that the
monies get to those who are in need. So that when constituents sit back
home and they see the debating going on here and the ire going on here
and maybe some of the disagreements, and then they wonder, Where is my
help coming? We've sent it to the States, we've sent it to the cities,
and it's important for you to hold them accountable as to the resources
that are needed to improve your quality of life.
So I'm here today to announce that we're not going home, we're just
pausing, because we have to come back and make sure that the payroll
tax cuts are extended for working Americans, so that we can ensure that
we don't lose 400,000 jobs and help 160 million Americans, many of them
the families of soldiers that are returning home.
And then, of course, it is important for us to ensure that the
unemployed--6 million of them--and some even beyond that, the 99ers
who've come up against the wall of no unemployment insurance, are taken
care of.
And can I just say to you, unemployment insurance is not a handout. I
spoke with someone just the other day who had four boys that they had
to take care of, was working and now on unemployment, trying to find
work. But they worked. This is their insurance. This is the wisdom of
America, to not let people be abandoned.
And so I would hope that we would find the collegiate ability to give
the media back home and here more positive messages to take back and
not utilize, if you will, the media waves in the First Amendment to
ridicule an institution that so many of us and all of us hold dear, not
for us being here present, not for any personal status, but we hold it
dear and near because of the history of this place. So many decisions
have been made.
The early Founding Fathers had a smaller setting just outside of
these Chambers, but this is how we have come to be the longest lasting
democracy, because we view this place as a place to work out our
differences and not a place to raise our differences.
We've had some major crises in this country. I'd like to have been
here and imagine what the Members were addressing in the 1929 collapse
when, if you read your history books, people were jumping out of
windows, primarily in places where they felt the financial impact.
Congress had to come together. Decisions might not have been the best,
but they made it through the 1930s. I know my grandparents have spoken
about what that depression was really like. And then a President by the
name of Franklin Delano Roosevelt dealt with World War II, but also
dealt with the dismal conditions of this Nation and put America back to
work to bring about the prosperity of the 1950s.
I have the greatest hope that we have that potential. And I know that
President Obama believes in job creation and has done so--3 million
jobs and more to come. And rather than focus on a company that would
disregard the patriotic obligation to hire Americans and think that
it's so easy to pick up--and it is. We are a democracy. We have no
restraints on anyone planting their business anywhere, moving their
business anywhere. But to think that we have lost the patriotism that
would cause me to say, You know what? I'm going to suck it in, keep
these hardworking Americans working--in whatever State it is--and I'm
not going to fall victim to greed and leave, but I'm going to stay put
and make sure that I am taking care of the American people, that's what
I would hope to see in this country, all of us pulling ourselves
together and pulling up our bootstraps, and making sure that we have
the ability to work hard, and to ensure that as we work hard we can
make this country a great place. That is the challenge that we have.
And I might say this one thing about bailouts and investments; you
don't know how excited I am--and I'm not from Michigan--to be able to
applaud again the automobile industry, because we were right in there
recognizing that it wasn't just making cars in Detroit. It was all the
car dealerships and all the guys and ladies that supported the Boy
Scouts and boys and girls clubs and little leagues that were going to
be impacted.
{time} 1520
Oh, look at them now, many of them just rolling along, selling
American cars again. That was the right thing to do.
And when we came after 9/11 and airlines came to us saying we just
can't make it, and we had to extend a helping hand--I wouldn't even
call it a bailout--but they needed us because of the horrific tragedy
and attacks and murderous actions of 9/11. And thank goodness we did;
and look, there are families being reunited on America's airlines
today.
Sometimes the government has to do what is unpopular for the greater
good. Yes, there are more things to do with the financial industry;
there are questions to be answered about foreclosure that still
continues. There is work to be done to help our families restore their
wealth. There are questions to be asked about the wealth disparity, the
numbers of impoverished, the children that are literally living in
poverty, the numbers of families that are on supplemental food
assistance, 46 million.
But for one moment, I have never thought that America was not a great
country; I never doubted her. In spite of the accusations and the name-
calling that comes about in the political process, I never doubt the
greatness of America.
Mr. DREIER. Will the gentlewoman yield?
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. DREIER. I thank my friend for yielding, and I would like to join
with my friend in stating that this great level of patriotism and
dedication to the United States of America is something that obviously
does transcend party. And while we obviously disagree on lots of
issues, I appreciate the fact that she has pointed to this spirit of
agreement and comity. I think it's very key on this particular day, as
we have dealt in a bipartisan way with the threat of a government
shutdown that's looming just hours away from us now, we have been able
to successfully avert that.
But the reason that I have asked my friend to yield is that we met in
the Rules Committee until early this morning, and I've been going for
the last couple of days, and I just heard over the past several hours
of the passing of a good friend of mine who was one of the greatest
essayists and witticists of our time.
And when I heard the news of Christopher Hitchens' passing, I was
struck with what a dedicated and patriotic individual he was. I suspect
that he
[[Page H9916]]
would have disagreed with my friend on the issue of dealing with
radical Islam, but it's one of the things that brought the two of us
together. He and I, over the last decade-plus, have spent a great deal
of time talking about that and other international policy issues.
But if one looks at the series that he wrote in Vanity Fair, as he
was diagnosed with cancer, they are very, very powerful. And, again,
Christopher Hitchens and I didn't agree on every issue, but I always
enjoyed the exchanges and the time that I was able to spend with him
and, of course, have been fascinated by his works. I think that the
world is a better place for Christopher Hitchens having lived and,
obviously, we're saddened by his passing.
I want to say to his wife and daughters that our thoughts--I hesitate
to say prayers when it comes to Christopher--go to him, because he was
a very committed atheist; but I will say that our thoughts and, since
we have them, our prayers are with the members of the Hitchens family,
and to say that his works, because he was such a great writer, will
continue for years and years to come to fascinate and intrigue and
create the kind of intellectual curiosity that is necessary.
I just would like to say that I am saddened by the passing of my
friend, Christopher Hitchens, and certainly have had my life improved
and bettered by his having lived.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the gentleman from California. I
think his presence on the floor indicates our bipartisanship and thank
him for raising those comments about Christopher and our knowledge
about him as well.
Let me also indicate my concern and sympathy to his family. That
speaks to my point of coming together and being able to share and yield
to a gentleman from the other party. As I do so, I would indicate
that's how we should go forward as we come back to vote positively on
the payroll tax extension next week and stay here until it is done and,
of course, the unemployment insurance, but going forward in 2012 to
answer some of the cries of many of those who have taken to our streets
throughout America who have asked us about jobs, the Occupy Movement,
that have been just Americans. I just call them Americans, who have
taken up the constitutional privilege of petitioning their government.
Mr. Speaker, I want to make a commitment that our work will be
focused on action and make the second part of the 112th Congress equal
to what we did in the 111th with pay parity, with the GI Bill, with the
affordable health care bill, and so many other items that were so
valuable to this country, and when I say that, legislative initiatives.
Let me also say to the American public and our local communities, I
know you think someone else is calling or emailing, but this is what
democracy is all about. We want to hear from you on these issues of how
we come together, not how we come together, but the importance of doing
so and working on issues and whether or not you appreciate the concept
of where there is benefit, there is burden, there is sacrifice, whether
or not you think it's important that there are not homeless veterans or
soldiers who are coming back who can't work, whether or not we want to
encourage our corporations that have this massive cash on hand to
realize what a wonderful, patriotic Nation that they live in, and to be
able to work and ensure that we have the ability to do the job that is
necessary to be done.
I know that Mr. Hoyer was coming to the floor, so let me just say to
Mr. Hoyer, who will be coming to you in just awhile to, again, assure
the working people of America that this Congress will have the payroll
tax extended and the President will sign it as we note that he has said
every day that he wants to sign it and will sign it.
Let me say to the unemployed, I know that the unemployment insurance
allows you to pay your mortgage and to pay your rent and to pay your
necessities, but let me say to you that we are looking to create jobs,
more jobs in America. And I expect to be introducing legislation that
will help the energy industry reduce the deficit, repair our coastal
waters and our ecosystems, make sure that we are responding to the loss
of wetlands and the deterioration by hurricanes that have come on that
gulf region there to restore the healthy fishing waters but, as well,
to develop our natural gas and the ability to utilize the present
expiration that generates resources for the American people.
This is a season of giving, and I only want that America be known as
a benevolent Nation, but strong and powerful in her values and, of
course, respecting her military, but the military, based upon a
civilian-led government that focuses on democracy, equality, and
justice. And I say to my colleagues, let's come back here next week to
finish our job; but 2012, let it be the no name-calling session. Let us
focus on what we do for others, what we do for Americans; and let it
not be as a progressive or a conservative, but let it be as an
American. That's the call for this Nation: to come and stand as an
American.
Mr. Speaker, it has been my privilege to share my thoughts with my
colleagues, and I hope that as this legislation will be signed by the
President, although it has had a very difficult journey, and I would
have wanted a more expanded debate, we are glad that we are serving
America. Let us be prepared to roll up our sleeves to do so in the
coming early days of 2012.
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker, and I yield back the balance of my
time.
____________________