[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 22 (Thursday, February 9, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S485-S486]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MAP-21
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I appreciate the comments of my
distinguished Republican colleague. The Senate just voted 85 to 11 to
invoke cloture on a motion to proceed to the surface transportation
bill, a bipartisan bill the sponsors of which, Senator Boxer and
Senator Inhofe--an unlikely pair--have joined together to move forward
on, a piece of legislation that is extremely important to this country,
a bill that will save or create 2 million jobs.
There are four parts of this bill within the jurisdiction of four
Senate committees. The Environment and Public Works Committee is what
we are on now. I have sought to amend that with a provision that is
coming from the Banking Committee. We have one coming from the Finance
Committee--that has been approved on a bipartisan basis, and we will
move after we do those two to the Commerce section. We have not dealt
with the Finance Committee provision or the Commerce Committee.
I appreciate that the Republicans never lose an opportunity to mess
up a good piece of legislation. We have had that happen now for the
last 3 years. We saw it in spades last year. Here is a bipartisan bill
to create and save jobs. No one disputes the importance of this
legislation. Every State in the Union is desperate for these dollars.
We are not borrowing money to do it; it is all paid for. Whether it is
the State of West Virginia, the State of Missouri, or the State of
Nevada, all the departments of transportation are waiting to find out
what is going to happen at the end of March. That is fast approaching.
We need to get this done.
Then I hope we can deal with other matters and not get bogged down on
this legislation. Let's do the Banking part of this bill. Let's do the
Finance part of this bill. Let's do the Commerce part of this bill.
But to show how the Republicans never lose an opportunity to mess up
a good piece of legislation, listen to this: They are talking about
first amendment rights, the Constitution. I appreciate that. But that
is so senseless. This debate that is going on dealing with this issue,
dealing with contraception, is a rule that has not been made final yet.
There is no final rule. Let's wait until there is at least a rule we
can talk about. There is not a final rule. That is all you read about
in the newspapers, why there are discussions going on as we speak.
There is not a rule. Everybody should calm down. Let's see what
transpires.
Until there is a final rule on this, let's deal with the issue before
us. That is saving jobs for our country. People can come and talk about
the Constitution, the first amendment--I have never seen anything like
this before, but I have never seen anything like this before, either.
There is no final rule. Why don't we calm down and see what the final
rule is.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I am, of course disappointed not being able
to offer this amendment today, but it is an amendment we talked about
for some time. It was a bipartisan amendment. It was a bipartisan piece
of legislation. Senator Nelson from Nebraska and I wish to offer it and
wish to offer it as soon as possible.
I have the highest regard for both of our leaders, both the majority
leader and minority leader, and understand they have a job to do, but
this highway bill is clearly going to take some time. This is a 4-page
amendment that I would be glad to see voted on on Monday. It has been
widely studied all week, this week. I would have been glad to see it
voted on when I filed the bill in August. There was not a rule then
either, but both Mr. Nelson and I, Senator Rubio, Senator Ayotte, and
others were anticipating that we were going to begin to see exactly the
kinds of things this discussion this week has brought about.
This is about the first amendment. It is about religious beliefs. It
is not about any one issue. In fact, this amendment specifically does
not mention a specific issue. It refers to the issue of conscience. In
the amendment itself the reference is made to the letter that in 1809
Thomas Jefferson sent to the New London Methodist, where he says: of
all the principles in the Constitution, the one that we perhaps hold
most dear, if I could paraphrase it a little bit, is the right of
conscience and that no government should be able to come in and impose
itself between the people and their faith-based principles.
In health care we have never had this before. Why didn't we need this
amendment or why didn't we need the bill that was filed in August 5
years ago or 1 year ago or 2 years ago or 3 years ago? Because only
with the passage of the Affordable Health Care Act did we have the
government in a position, for the first time ever, to begin to give
specific mandates to health care providers.
This bill would simply say those health care providers do not have to
follow that mandate if it violates their faith principles, faith
principles that are part of a health care delivery system. That could
be through any number of different faith groups, and I have talked to a
lot of them. Frankly, some of those faith group views of health care do
not agree with my views or my faith's views of health care. But that is
not the point here. This is not about whether I agree with what that
faith group wants to do. It is whether they are allowed to do it;
whether the representative of that view of health care
[[Page S486]]
and how it affects people is able to say to their government: No, this
is something that is protected by the Constitution. It is protected by
the first amendment. You cannot require me to provide a service--
through a faith-based institution--that I do not agree with or you
cannot require me as a health care provider to provide a service that I
do not agree with because of my faith.
It doesn't mean you cannot get it somewhere else if it is something
that can legally be done. It just means people of faith or institutions
of faith do not have to do it. That is why in almost every Catholic
church in America, the last two weekends, a letter has been read from
the bishop or the archbishop that said this is unacceptable, it should
not be complied with.
That is why the Chaplain to the Army, the Chief Archbishop to the
Army, Bishop Broglio, sent out a letter to be read at Catholic mass at
Army posts all over the country. Initially that letter was not going to
be read because it did not agree with the tenets the government was
pursuing at the time--which is the violation that people would see most
offensive, I think, that the government would actually begin to say to
people of faith you cannot even talk about it. You cannot even have
that letter read on a military post, from the person who is responsible
to the chaplains and the Catholic chaplains in the military.
Maybe it is a faith view of how to deliver health care that somebody
in the Christian Science community has or somebody in the Seventh Day
Adventist community has or the Southern Baptist community or whatever
that might be. The specific thing is not the issue here. The issue here
is can government require a faith-based institution to go beyond the
tenets of its faith.
I know the Democratic leader, the majority leader, said there is not
even a rule yet. The White House said--the administration said there
would be a rule. And to make it even more offensive, they said: And, by
the way, here is what the rule is going to be and we are going to give
you a year to figure out how to adjust your views to accommodate the
rule.
I would have been less offended if they said here is the rule and we
understand it is in violation of your views but here is what is going
to be the rule and you will have to comply with it. The idea they could
change your views, your religious views, your religious beliefs, in a
year or a lifetime because some Federal regulator says you need to is
unbelievably offensive in our country based on the principles that we
hold most dear in the Constitution itself.
So this amendment, which is bipartisan in nature and I think easily
understood because it is so fundamental to who we are, is an amendment
that could be quickly debated, it could be quickly voted on. The Senate
of the United States could express its view. I believe that view would
be one supportive of institutions of faith.
By the way, also, the administration saying we gave an exemption for
the church itself--No. 1, I do not know how long that exemption would
last. And, No. 2, I think that shows a lack of understanding of the
work of the church or the work of the synagogue or the work of the
mosque or the work of people of coming together. If the only thing that
matters in their work is what happens within the four walls of the
church or whoever works in the four walls of the church every day,
these institutions are not what I believe they are.
The great schools, the great hospitals, the great community-providing
institutions of America have, so many of them for so long, been based
on faith principles. This amendment would say for health care, those
faith principles would still be the overriding principle. For health
care, if someone does not agree with the direction of the government,
they do not have to perform that service. They do not have to provide
that specific kind of insurance to their employees.
Remember, the underlying bill here, the underlying rule that has been
announced, even though it may not have been officially issued, is one
that talks about people who have chosen to go to work for, to get a
paycheck for, to work at the direction of a faith-based community. Then
to tell that community what your insurance has to look like--that is
just one of the many steps. If the government can do that, what can't
the government do? If the government can do that, where does the
government stop? If the government can do that--when you say this is
something I don't believe in so I don't want to be part of this
particular health care issue, this health care moment, this health care
episode--whatever you want to call it, you say, oh, well, you have to
do it because the government says you have to do it and the first
amendment does not matter, the protection of conscience doesn't matter,
the Jefferson letter to New London Methodist doesn't matter.
Until the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, this was never an issue and nothing would happen if this amendment
was approved and became the law of the land. Nothing would be different
tomorrow than it was a year ago, because a year ago people were not
doing this. Five years ago nobody would have even thought it was
possible, that the Federal Government would tell a faith-based hospital
what their insurance plan exactly had to look like, the plan that they
offered their employees or would tell faith-based health care providers
what they could do and what they could not do or would say if you are
not going to do everything the government will pay for, we will not pay
you to do anything the government pays for.
This is an issue many people in the country feel strongly about, many
people in the Senate, both Democrats and Republicans, feel strongly
about. We can let this go on and create the anxiety it creates for the
faith community or we can bring this amendment up, debate it--and,
frankly, I think it is pretty well understood--debate it, vote on it,
and let the country know that we still support the Constitution of the
United States.
While I am disappointed I did not get to offer this amendment today,
I will be back and I am going to do my best to get this amendment
offered at the earliest possible time, and I would be glad to see the
Senate join me, and the majority join me, in saying let's get this
important issue off the minds of the American people and let them know
the Constitution still matters and religious liberty is still the first
amendment to the Constitution in the United States.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
(The remarks of Mr. Enzi pertaining to the introduction of S. 2091
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mr. ENZI. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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