[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 18 (Friday, February 3, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H459-H463]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEGISLATIVE PROGRAM
(Mr. HOYER asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, for the purpose of inquiring about the
schedule for the week to come, I am pleased to yield to my friend from
Virginia (Mr. Cantor), the majority leader.
Mr. CANTOR. I thank the gentleman from Maryland, the Democratic whip,
for yielding.
Mr. Speaker, on Monday, the House will meet at noon for morning-hour
and 2 p.m. for legislative business. Votes will be postponed until 6:30
p.m. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the House will meet at 10 a.m. for
morning-hour and noon for legislative business. On
[[Page H460]]
Thursday, the House will meet at 9 a.m. for legislative business. Last
votes for the week are expected no later than 3 p.m. on Thursday.
Mr. Speaker, the House will consider a few bills under suspension of
the rules, which will be announced by the close of business today.
Building upon our legislative agenda this week, the House will
consider two more bills next week aimed at reforming the Federal budget
process, including H.R. 3521, the Expedited Legislative Line-Item Veto
and Rescissions Act, a bipartisan bill sponsored by Budget Committee
Chairman Paul Ryan and cosponsored by Ranking Member Chris Van Hollen,
as well as H.R. 3581, the Budget and Accounting Transparency Act,
sponsored by Congressman Scott Garrett.
In addition, the House will act on legislation passed in the Senate
yesterday, commonly referred to as the STOCK Act.
Finally, the House may consider H.R. 1734, the Civilian Property
Realignment Act, sponsored by Congressman Jeff Denham.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman for his information and would ask
him on the timing.
The conference committee has met twice on the payroll tax cut, the
unemployment insurance, and the so-called ``doc fix,'' or to ensure the
fact that doctors are compensated and will be available for Medicare
patients. The conference committee, Mr. Leader, has met twice since
December 23. We adopted a motion to instruct, overwhelmingly, through
the House to make sure that they reported back by February 17.
{time} 1150
I think you may have read my comments in the press that if we do not
do it by the 17th, then we're off for a week and we will be back the
27th, 28th, and 29th, come back the night of the 27th, and we'll be
jammed at the end on Wednesday, the 29th. We only have 6 full days left
before the February break. Now, that does not include our 6:30 start
times.
House Democrats, Mr. Leader, stand ready to, frankly, I think, work
through the weekend if that were necessary. But I'm very concerned that
something that we all want to get done--and I've made the suggestion to
my Democratic conferees, and they were equally amused as you are. I
understand that.
I will tell you that I have great concerns that we're going to get to
the 27th, 28th, and 29th and be in the same kind of confrontation and
debacle that we found ourselves in in December. That's not good for
your party. In my opinion, it's not good for our party. It's not good
for the House and Senate; but it is certainly not good for the 160
million people who are going to be concerned about whether or not, in
fact, their tax cut is going to continue, or the Medicare people who
are going to be concerned about whether their doc is going to be
available, or the unemployed who are going to be concerned.
Now, of course, for the unemployed, we had some very good news. You
didn't mention it in your opening comments, but I'm sure you were as
excited as I was about the 257,000 new private sector jobs that were
created last month; showed real progress.
But I will tell you that I'm very concerned about the timing and
would be delighted to hear the gentleman's thoughts on the success and
the progress of the conference committee.
Mr. CANTOR. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Speaker, what I would say is the Republicans on the House side,
led by Chairman Camp, have been and are ready to make sure we resolve
the issue of the payroll tax holiday extension right now. The issue has
been the reluctance on the gentleman's side of the aisle on the other
side of the Capitol. So if I thought that working 7 days a week,
through weekends and all hours of the day and night would make a
difference, I would be all for that as well.
The fact of the matter is, Mr. Speaker, this House continues to act.
This House passed a yearlong extension that also did not have the
effect of raiding the Social Security trust fund, something that the
gentleman and I both want to make sure happens, that we restore the
integrity of that fund for the people who are counting on it.
But, Mr. Speaker, I would say the House also, this week, acted on
several measures that, frankly, are very relevant to the work of the
conference committee, but yet no action by the Senate. One of those
things, as the gentleman knows, was passed out of the House this week.
It was a measure calling for a pay freeze at the Federal level for
Federal employees, including Members of the House and Senate. This was
a bipartisan vote; 309 Members voted for that. It allowed for about $26
billion in savings that could be easily included in the conference
committee deliberations, something that our side continues to want to
include, but yet no answer from the Senate majority leader and his
conferees.
So, again, I would tell the gentleman, please, we are as anxious as
you are to try and resolve these issues.
We had another vote this week, Mr. Speaker, which garnered 400 votes
in the House--a bipartisan bill--which called for some necessary
reforms to the TANF program. These were reforms which preclude the use
of the monies that beneficiaries receive for purchases of services at
casinos and other types of establishments, that perhaps those monies
could be better spent not in those places; but again, no response from
the Senate.
And I would ask the gentleman if he could please direct his urgency
towards the majority leader in the Senate to see if we can get this off
the dime and resolve the issue of the payroll tax so we can, as the
gentleman suggests, send a very certain signal to the people who are
struggling out there, working day in and day out, that their taxes will
not go up.
As for the gentleman's suggestion about the job numbers, I don't know
if he saw my public statement this morning, but I said that was welcome
news, that when you have job creation like that, welcome news, but I
also think we can do a lot better.
I was pleased to see that the President came out this week and said
he now, too, wants to be a champion of small business; and we say we
are happy to work with this White House so that we can provide the help
to small businesses. We will be bringing to the floor, before tax day,
a small business tax cut bill that goes right at the issue of helping
small business people, allowing them more incentive to invest their
capital so they can create jobs and we can see this economy really take
off.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman for his comments.
Of course we have long been a supporter of small business. We believe
small business is the engine of our economy. We believe we need to grow
entrepreneurs. We need to expand, frankly, small business and the
middle class.
It was interesting what the gentleman referred to in response to my
question. Yes, we understand that cutting the pay of average working
Americans--who happen to be Federal employees, but they're average
working Americans--is the way you want to pay for what we do. We, of
course, want to pay for it with some of the wealthiest people in our
country just contributing a little bit more as opposed to average
working people who are struggling by. And, by the way, the sponsor of
that piece of legislation to which you referred indicated he was having
a tough time getting by supporting his family on the salary that he
makes here in Congress.
Now, frankly, we offered, as you know, to have a vote on freezing
Members of Congress' salary straight up--not hidden in another bill,
but straight up--which I would have supported and my side would have
supported overwhelmingly, I presume your side would have supported
overwhelmingly. We, of course, didn't get that opportunity because,
frankly, our priorities do, in fact, differ.
Average working people as opposed to the best off in America, that's
the choice in this conference committee, apparently; because you want
to pay for it with average working people taking a hit, and we want to
pay for it by just asking just a little more from the wealthiest in
America to help us through this tough patch that we're in.
Things are getting better. The gentleman--I haven't seen his release,
but I will certainly look at his release. He says we ought to do
better. I will tell the gentleman we're doing a lot better.
[[Page H461]]
The gentleman knows that during the last 5 months of the Bush
administration, we lost 3,192,000 jobs. The gentleman smiles because,
oh, that's history. Well, it is history, and we ought to learn from it
because we were following the economic policies the gentleman still
continues to press upon the American people. We lost 3,192,000 jobs in
5 months. In the last 5 months, however, we have gained now over 1
million jobs. That's progress. In fact, over the last 22 months, we've
gained over 3 million jobs so that we are making significant progress.
Not enough. We dug a very, very deep hole and we're trying to get out
of it, but the fact of the matter is losing 3 million jobs in 5 months
and gaining 1 million jobs in 5 months is about a 4 million job
difference.
So I tell my friend both in terms of who ought to pay for the
investments that we have agreed we need to make. We don't want to raise
taxes on these folks as the economy is still coming back, obviously
showing great progress, but we don't want to pay for it with average
working people having to pay the price.
{time} 1200
I will tell my friend, I was disappointed that we didn't have a
separate vote so that Members of Congress could vote straight up on
their being frozen. And I will tell my friend that I will work with
him, perhaps towards that end.
Now having said that, I am sure the gentleman has been in
conversations with the gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Camp). Is the
gentleman expecting a relatively early report back from the conference
committee, hopefully prior to the 18th of February when we might be
voting on this?
Mr. CANTOR. Let me respond, if you will yield.
Mr. HOYER. I yield, certainly.
Mr. CANTOR. Mr. Speaker, I would say to the gentleman, first of all,
I do hope that we can act in an expeditious manner to accomplish the
same goal that he's stated. That I agree with. We need to let the
people of this country out there who are working so hard know that they
are not going to have their taxes go up on them and that we should
allow that certainty for a full year, the position this House has taken
from the very beginning.
I would say to the gentleman about his assertions of our policies and
those under the last President and perhaps their effect on job creation
or job loss, the issue is right now--and my question to the gentleman
is, as far as that's concerned: Doesn't he agree that we could be doing
better?
And that's my point, Mr. Speaker: we can do better. We can do better
by focusing on the private sector small businessmen and -women so that
we can empower them to begin to invest and create jobs again. We can do
better. That is what we intend to do straight up through policies that
affect reduction of red tape in this town to make it easier for small
businessmen and -women to operate; as I indicated before, a bill to be
brought forward to provide for a 20 percent tax cut for small
businesses.
And I hope if the gentleman says he's for small businesses that he'll
join us in a bipartisan way to support a bill that provides for a 20
percent tax cut for small businesses.
Now, I would ask the gentleman as well, he continues to advocate
higher taxes for people, higher taxes. That's what we hear: higher
taxes on people who make a lot of money. Well, the fact is, the result
of that is putting more money into this town, putting more money into
the hands of Washington so that Washington can decide where people's
money is spent.
We all know we've got a spending problem, and we all know that
raising taxes does not dig us out of the hole. So I would just ask the
gentleman, Does he think that's going to fix the problem? It's not as
if we're saying we don't want to help the people who are out there
struggling. That's what we're trying to do. So I'm looking forward to
working with him in a bipartisan way to see if we can get resolution on
these issues.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman. And we all look forward to working
together in a bipartisan way. We sure have found great difficulty doing
it, however, because we have trouble having a meeting of the minds.
I will tell my friend that what I advocate over and over and over
again is paying for what we buy. That's what I advocate. And if you
don't want it, don't buy it.
You controlled this town for 8 years from an economic-policy
standpoint. I know we were in charge of the Congress for the last 2
years. We couldn't pass anything over George Bush's veto. You and I
both know that. So for 8 years, we didn't pay for what we bought; and
we went from surplus to deficit. We went from a debt of $5.6 trillion
to a debt of almost $11 trillion.
Have we added to the debt? Yes, we did. Why? Because we went into the
deepest depression, starting in '07, that this country has been in in
your lifetime and my lifetime; and I'm a lot older than you. So that's
what I advocate: paying for what we buy and having the courage to make
decisions on doing exactly that. And very frankly, on your side of the
aisle, when you go and say, look, we need to pay for elections, who do
you go to? You go to your Members, and you go to people who have some
resources that they can contribute to an effort you think is very
important.
I think America's efforts are very important. And I think those of us
who have done better ought to pay a little more than those who are
struggling, as the gentleman refers to. Yes, that's the difference. I
believe it's the difference, and I will continue to advocate paying for
what we buy. That's why I was for statutory PAYGO, which George Bush
abandoned and which essentially is not being followed today, as I think
all of us should do.
So I will tell my friend that I think we ought to do better. I agree
with him. And we did do better. We did do better under policies that I
supported. We grew 22 million jobs in the nineties. We lost jobs in the
2000s. We went backwards. And the stock market went up 216 percent in
the nineties. Under George Bush, it went down 26 percent. Yes, I think
we can do better, and we ought to do better. And we ought to do better
by investing.
Let me talk a little bit about the bill that the Speaker's talked
about, you've talked about, it's been in the news: infrastructure and
jobs. The Transportation and Infrastructure Committee marked up a
controversial highway bill--the gentleman says we want to work
together. I agree with that. He and I try to do that. We don't always
succeed, but we try to do it. They marked up the bill yesterday for 17
hours and finished around 3 a.m.
I don't know whether the gentleman knows this, but at the start of
that debate, the gentleman from West Virginia (Mr. Rahall), the ranking
member, asked all the members of the Transportation Committee, when the
bill was put on, to raise their hand if they had read the bill. You
know how many people raised their hand--that's a rhetorical question
because I think the gentleman probably hasn't inquired of this--none.
On an 800-page bill, not one person raised their hand that they had
read the bill. There was a lot of discussion about reading the bill.
There was, of course, as you know, a bipartisan ``no'' vote. One of
the senior members voted against it. This is in stark contrast to the
unanimous vote that occurred in the United States Senate on the bill.
The Committee on Natural Resources also completed a controversial
markup on opening ANWR to drilling--as I understand it, you are going
to put that in the infrastructure bill--with the clear knowledge that
that is a very controversial item that will not pass the United States
Senate. You may have the votes here. That is similar to what happened
on the payroll tax cut just last December.
If you are going to work on a bipartisan basis, we ought to
understand that we are going to have to not try to push on one party or
the other things that are unacceptable and won't pass and don't have
the votes.
The reason that George Bush signed so many bills that we passed in
the Congress in '07 and '08 was because we worked with the
administration, and we worked with the Senate. The Senate and the House
were controlled by Democrats; President Bush was in office. He signed
more than twice as many bills that we passed. Why? Because we worked
with him. We would urge you to do the same.
Is the gentleman planning to bring up the infrastructure bill to the
floor
[[Page H462]]
soon? And can he tell the Members if it will be considered under an
open process? Furthermore, is the majority leader expecting there to be
bipartisan cooperation on the infrastructure package so that we do not
have to go up against another deadline? As the gentleman knows, on
March 31 the highway authorization bill ends. We temporarily included
it.
And let me end with this before you answer your question, because Ray
LaHood was a leader in this Congress. Ray LaHood was a leader on your
side of the aisle. Ray LaHood and I served together for a long time. I
don't know whether you've seen his quote, but I think it bears
consideration by your side of the aisle of a Republican from middle
America--Peoria, Illinois--who your minority leader, Bob Michel, had as
his chief of staff.
Here is what he said about the infrastructure bill that was marked
up: ``This is the most partisan transportation bill that I have ever
seen, and it is also the most anti-safety bill I have ever seen.'' This
is a direct quote from Ray LaHood, Republican, former Member of this
House for many years, and former chief of staff to the minority leader
Bob Michel. ``It hollows out our number one priority, which is safety;
and frankly, it hollows out the guts of the transportation efforts that
we've been about for the last 3 years. It's the worst transportation
bill I've ever seen during 35 years in public service,'' Ray LaHood,
Politico, February 3. That's today. He said it today, in realtime. This
is real breaking news from the Transportation Secretary: the worst
transportation bill he has seen in 35 years.
{time} 1210
That does not, I tell my friend, bode well for bipartisan cooperation
on a piece of legislation that nobody in the committee had read. So I'd
ask my friend, do we expect to bring that bill up under those
conditions in the near term?
Mr. CANTOR. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Speaker, first of all, we expect to vote on the bill the week of
the 13th. I think there will be adequate time for Members to review the
bill and the text, to the gentleman's concern about Mr. Rahall's
inquiry last night in the committee. That is exactly why we are
allowing for the time, so that Members can review such a big bill, a
bill that means so many jobs to so many Americans.
I hope that the gentleman will be true to his nature, which is
bipartisan, and to work with us, because this American Energy and
Infrastructure Jobs Act is just that; it's a jobs bill. It is a bill
that can provide some certainty to our contractors, some certainty to
our communities so that we can start to grow again and see jobs
proliferate.
But I find it ironic that the gentleman complains about paying for
it, because he talks about our wanting to open up our resources, our
resources offshore, our resources in ANWR as, number one, an attempt to
allow America to develop finally a national energy policy, but to also
promote jobs.
The gentleman knows, as I do, the energy sector provides an awful lot
of jobs in plenty parts of this country, and can do a lot more, and is
willing. Private capital, willing to deploy to create jobs.
But I find it also ironic, Mr. Speaker, that the gentleman complains
that there's no bipartisanship because somehow we're not working with
the administration. Well, the administration's been absent on all of
this. They're not interested in working with us to create a product
where we can see jobs created.
As you can see, the Secretary sits in his office and opines and
attacks the bill, saying it is all the negative things that he said.
Now, that's not a way to collaborate and work together. And the
gentleman knows that as well. The gentleman knows that that is
certainly not how things have worked in this town if you want to
produce a result.
So the gentleman can claim the mantle of wanting to work together and
that the administration is being trampled by some action here. He knows
good and well, Mr. Speaker, that this administration has been absent in
so many of the discussions on so many important issues. And the fact
that we differ on policy, yes. But I think the gentleman also knows
that reasonable people can disagree, but that doesn't mean that we
can't work together to find some things that we agree on.
Certainly, we agree on jobs. The gentleman says we agree on small
business. I'm looking for his support of that small business tax credit
bill. And we agree on infrastructure spending being an important part
of our economy. So I'm looking forward to the next week or so, as the
bill works its way to the floor, to hopefully garner his support.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman.
Wonderful, wonderful logic. A Republican leader in this House is
appointed to include bipartisan--and the Secretary of Transportation,
who was a leader in this House, and the chief of staff of the minority
leader of this House, says that the bill you have drafted, that your
Members didn't read before they passed it out of committee--and the
public, I'm sure, is glad that at least we're going to read it before
we pass it. I hope that's the case. I've heard a lot of talk about
reading the bills. Nobody read it before they passed it out of
committee. And the Republican Secretary of Transportation, former chief
of staff of the minority leader, says, my friend, it's the most
partisan bill he has ever seen in 35 years.
And then you say, well, I know we passed the most partisan bill in 35
years, but, gee, the administration won't work with us. You don't
accept that premise. I understand that. But it's ironic that you say
the administration won't work with you.
You and I both know Ray LaHood happens to be one of the more
bipartisan people with whom you and I have served. I've worked
frequently with Congressman LaHood when he represented Peoria, as a
Republican in the House of Representatives. He and I worked together on
a lot of issues. Why? Because he wanted to get things done. He wasn't
just simply interested in making political points.
Now, you bring up ANWR in terms of pay-for. I'm for paying this. You
didn't hear me say anything about offshore drilling, this and that. I
did about ANWR because you and I both know, in a bipartisan way, many
of your Members have voted against opening up ANWR, and we have, as the
gentleman knows, millions of acres, millions of acres currently
available for drilling in Alaska right now as we speak.
So we want to have a bipartisan--but putting an 800-page bill on the
table, no chance to read it, passing it in a 17-hour marathon session,
and then having clearly no--having not worked at all with Ray LaHood,
and if you're telling me that Ray LaHood won't work with Republicans, I
simply do not accept that premise. I think that's a disservice to Ray
LaHood if that's what you are saying. He is the Secretary of
Transportation. And there is no doubt in my mind, none, zero, that if
Mr. Mica wants to work with Ray LaHood on a bipartisan bill, Ray LaHood
will be here as many hours, days, and weeks as Mr. Mica needs him here,
and I think you would, hopefully, agree with that proposition.
Ray LaHood is a Republican, but he is a bipartisan American who wants
to get things done for our country and create those jobs of which you
speak, which all of us want to do.
We have a jobs bill, by the way, that you have not brought to the
floor. What's one of the aspects of that jobs bill? Infrastructure,
investing in infrastructure. That bill has languished for 5 months now,
not brought to the floor by the majority leader, who has the authority
to bring it to the floor, and I've, of course, been urging him to do
so.
Now, if he'd like to comment--I have another point, but if he wants
to comment on what I have said, I yield.
Mr. CANTOR. Absolutely, Mr. Speaker. I join the gentleman in thinking
Secretary LaHood is a fine gentleman, but all I can say is actions
speak louder than words.
What I would say to the gentleman about his request for the
President's jobs bill and whether we're bringing the whole bill up for
a vote, I'd ask the gentleman, How many Members on his side of the
aisle have actually sponsored that bill?
I think that there are certainly many elements of that bill that we
can all agree on, and, in fact, we have voted on four separate
elements, big elements,
[[Page H463]]
of the President's small business agenda that he announced this week
that were part of that bill: crowd funding, many offerings to help
small business access financing; a bill to provide for 100 percent
depreciation; the provisions that will allow for more ability for small
business to see money go to the bottom line so they can grow; and a
bill that we passed out of this House to eliminate country caps for
immigration for highly skilled workers. All these are part of the
President's proposals. All these the House has passed, and they sit,
and they sit on the other side of the Capitol.
So I would say to the gentleman, he knows, as well as I do, that more
stimulus spending as a part of that, the President's proposal, is
something we don't accept, but there's plenty in there that we can
agree on.
Back to the notion of bipartisanship. Let's set aside differences and
find where we can agree. These are areas that we can agree on. So I
would say to the gentleman, please work with us. Please point the ire
to the majority leader on the other side of the Capitol and say, bring
these bills up. These are jobs bills. The President said so this week.
Mr. HOYER. The gentleman knows that a number of those proposals had
bipartisan support in this House, I think have bipartisan support over
in the Senate. But they need to be paid for, and that's where the
contention comes, as the gentleman knows.
Let me ask you, on another subject, if I might, the STOCK Act.
Yet, before I do that, I appreciate the gentleman's observation with
respect to those bills that the President has suggested we do that we
have done.
Mr. CANTOR. If the gentleman could yield just for a correction.
There's no need for pay-fors on these bills. These bills are something
that were cleared out of the House in a revenue neutral way.
Mr. HOYER. The individual bills. You're right.
Mr. CANTOR. Right. So, again, the gentleman is correct in saying
there is bipartisan support for these bills. The President supports
them. Where's the problem? It's across the hallway here, and if we
could actually get the majority there to help move these bills, we
could make some progress.
Mr. HOYER. We could make some progress if, frankly, the majority
leader could get 60 votes to enact the legislation and transact
business on the floor of the Senate. Unfortunately, as the gentleman
very well knows, the majority leader, Harry Reid, has had very great
difficulty getting 60 votes to proceed with business on the floor of
the House of the United States Senate. I think that's unfortunate.
But let me move on because the gentleman went from an infrastructure
bill, which, as Secretary LaHood said, was the most partisan bill he's
seen in 35 years, and shifted to the jobs, on which we agree. The fact
of the matter is that I want to talk about another piece of legislation
that the Senate has worked on. We have a bill here. We've asked that it
be taken from the floor, from the desk and put on the floor, and that's
the STOCK Act. The gentleman has expressed support for the STOCK Act.
I'm hopeful that we can pass a House bill and then go to conference
with the Senate on a bill in the near future.
Would the gentleman comment on that.
{time} 1220
Mr. CANTOR. It has always been my intention to try and act with
dispatch on this very important issue and to get the President a bill
that he can sign as quickly as possible.
Again, the underlying notion is, as the gentleman believes, we need
to make sure that the people that send us here know that we are acting
and abiding by the trust that they place in us. That's what the STOCK
Act is about. So what we're going to do next week, Mr. Speaker, as I
indicated earlier, is we are going to act with dispatch. We are going
to take up the Senate bill. We are currently reviewing the actions the
Senate took on that bill, and we intend to strengthen that bill, again,
to do so in a way that can get a bill to the President's desk as
quickly as possible so that there is no misunderstanding on the part of
the people that sent us here that they can have trust in this
institution and the Members, and there is no perception whatsoever that
anyone here misuses information that they gain in the performance of
their duties for their own personal benefit.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman for his response, and he says the
earliest day possible. I tell my friend that Tim Walz of Minnesota has
had a bill, as the gentleman probably knows, of the STOCK Act--also,
Louise Slaughter, ranking member of the Rules Committee, has worked on
for literally a decade or more--so we have legislation which is
available to take, frankly, from the desk, pass that, and go
immediately to conference with the Senate.
The gentleman indicates he wants to change the Senate bill. I think
that that may be appropriate; but if he does, we're going to have to go
to conference in any event. So my suggestion is you take Tim Walz's
bill, act on that, a House bill, and we go to conference on that bill.
That seems to me that's the most expeditious way to accomplish what the
gentleman says he wants to accomplish in a very quick fashion.
I think Tim Walz of Minnesota would be happy to hear that and
available to work towards that end, along with Louise Slaughter.
Mr. CANTOR. I say to the gentleman, first of all, I know the
gentleman likes to talk about past Congresses. When he was House
majority leader, he did not bring this STOCK Act to the floor, and it
was a submitted bill. So let's set the record straight. This majority
leader is going to bring a STOCK Act bill to the floor next week.
I would also say, Mr. Speaker, that Mr. Walz's bill actually would
weaken the Senate bill; and it is our intention to pass and get to the
President a workable, strong bill that makes sure that we're delivering
on the promise that we made to the people that sent us here. I hope the
gentleman--I know he wants to join me in the effort to reinstill the
confidence of the public that we are abiding by that trust.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I think that all of us, hopefully, agree with
what the leader has just said. We clearly want to make sure the
American public has confidence and trust in the actions we take in that
they are not driven by personal interests but by public interests, by a
concern for the welfare of the people we represent in our country.
With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
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