[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 59 (Tuesday, April 24, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2615-S2616]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2011--MOTION TO PROCEED
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the
Senate will resume consideration of the motion to proceed to S. 1925,
which the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Motion to proceed to S. 1925, a bill to reauthorize the
Violence Against Women Act of 1994.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from California.
Surface Transportation Act
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I am very pleased with what just happened
at the desk. For those who didn't follow it, the majority leader,
Senator Reid, and Senator McConnell, just named the conferees so we can
get moving with the House and settle our differences and move forward
with a very important transportation bill.
We all know how hard it has been on the construction industry. We all
know the housing crisis has made it very difficult for our construction
workers to get work. We all know at the same moment we have had this
real problem in the construction industry--where we have well over 1
million construction workers out of work and tens of thousands of
businesses that want to do construction work--70,000 of our bridges are
failing, half of our roads are in disrepair, and the American people
expect an infrastructure that meets the needs of the strongest economy
in the world, our economy.
So I am very pleased with what just happened. I am very pleased we
see the continuation over here of bipartisan support for a
transportation bill. We have Senator Reid working together with Senator
McConnell to name the conferees, and we had a unanimous vote in our
committee last year on this bill. It has been a very tortured path to
get to where we are now because, for some inexplicable reason, the
Republicans over in the House have insisted on just going to their own
party to reach agreement rather than going to the Democrats so we can
have bipartisanship over there. But I am very hopeful, with the naming
of these conferees today, the House will now do its job and name
conferees. I have been reading in the press that perhaps that will
happen tomorrow. So I am very hopeful.
Mr. President, it is 10:20 in the morning on Tuesday, and I want to
call attention to the fact we are now on the path we need to be on,
starting at this moment, to get to conference. There is no reason we
can't do that very soon when so much is at stake.
The Senate bill is a reform bill. There are no earmarks in that bill.
That bill is fully paid for. It doesn't add to the deficit. It protects
2 million jobs and creates another 1 million jobs. What good news will
it be for this economy to have this bill pass.
I know there are those who predicted this could never happen; that,
A, we would never get a bipartisan bill out of our committee, but we
did it; that, B, we would never get it to pass on the floor, but we did
it with 74 votes; and, C, that the House will never act, and the House
actually did act to move to conference. It took them a long time, but
we are there. So there is no reason we cannot work together to get this
done.
If Senator Inhofe and I can agree, then I think we should be able to
get a very strong bill through both Houses. On my committee--the
Environment and Public Works Committee, which I am so privileged to
chair--we have very conservative members, such as Senators Inhofe and
Sessions, and very progressive members, such as myself. We have Senator
Vitter on the other side and Senator Sessions, and on this side we have
Senators Sanders and Cardin. So we have members who reach the entire
ideological spectrum, and if we can all vote for a bill, then this can
happen and it will send a great signal to this country.
I thank all the groups that have worked so hard to bring pressure on
all of us to keep this moving forward. It starts with a coalition that
includes the AFL CIO and the chamber of commerce. Good for them. They
do not always agree, but they agree on this one.
[[Page S2616]]
Then we have all the business community that is behind us--the granite
people and the cement people and the general contractors. The list goes
on and on. There are many groups that have come together to push
forward on this bill.
So I want to mark this moment. I am happy I was able to be on the
Senate floor when the conferees were named. It is a great list of
conferees.
We have in this bill the RESTORE Act, which will rebuild the gulf
after the terrible BP spill, and we have people on this conference who
were very instrumental in writing the RESTORE Act, including Senator
Bill Nelson and Senator Richard Shelby. Senator Vitter also was
involved, and I want to take a moment to thank Senator Landrieu, who
was a driving force on this bill. There is no question that without her
insistence this wouldn't have happened. So what an opportunity we have.
Now, there are certain things I think we should keep out of this
conference, and that is things that tear us apart. There is no reason
to have controversy built into this conference. We can save those
battles for another day. I think, with this conference, we should just
all rally around the consensus of what has to be done. If it is
something outside the scope of the conference, if it is unanimous
and everybody thinks it is a good idea--such as the RESTORE Act--then
let's do it.
There is a provision in the bill that helps our rural counties use
the proceeds from timber sales for their schools--this is so critical--
and for their local governments. One could argue it is not part of the
transportation program, but it is a consensus. It is a coming together,
and where we can do that it is very important we stick with those
consensus items and stay away from the highly charged controversies. We
have plenty of time for that. We don't have to put that into this
conference. So I look forward to the House naming their conferees so we
can get this done.
I also want to say how important it is that we pass the Violence
Against Women Act. This bill, which has 61 cosponsors--it is my
understanding that is the case--is a strong bill, and it makes sure
people who are the victims of violence are taken care of, and it
continues a great program that was put together by then-Senator Joe
Biden.
I remember it well because I was in the House at the time and then-
Senator Biden, now Vice President Biden, doing such a great job, spoke
to me and said: Congresswoman Boxer, would you be willing to carry the
House version of the Violence Against Women Act? This was in the early
1990s. I looked at the bill, read the bill, and said I would be honored
to do so. I was so proud to work with Joe Biden on this issue. We had
worked together on coastal issues and now we worked together, at that
time, on violence against women.
I was able to get a couple of the provisions passed--a couple of, I
would say, smaller provisions passed: safety on campuses, campus
lighting, and some other things. But the heart of the bill did not pass
until I actually was over here in the Senate, when Senator Biden really
picked up steam and drove that bill through. My understanding is that
Senator Schumer--at that time in the House--picked up the bill and did
the same in the House.
This has been the law of the land--the Violence Against Women Act--
since the 1990s, so we don't need to have any arguments about it. I was
very glad to hear Senator McConnell say he didn't intend to have any
arguments about it because in this bill we cover even more people:
people who were brutalized, women who were brutalized, and it is very
key.
I see my colleague, Senator Harkin, has come to discuss a very
important matter, a labor matter, and I would tell him I will finish in
about 3 minutes, if that is OK with him.
I want to conclude by saying that the Violence Against Women Act is
what we call a no-brainer. It is a serious problem in our Nation.
Senator Reid said three women are killed every day because of violence
against women.
The shelters in our States are doing incredible work. They take in
women and children. They make sure there is protection and crack down
on the violators and there is no reason to argue about that.
The last thing I wanted to talk about in the last couple minutes goes
to the heart of what Senator McConnell said in his leader time. I have
noticed that almost every time Senator McConnell has a chance on the
Senate floor he comes and attacks President Obama and he goes after
President Obama and blames him for everything under the sun. I have to
say I support Senator McConnell's right to say whatever he wants to
say. He has every right to use his leadership powers to attack the
President and do it as much as he wants. So I am not complaining about
that. But I am just saying it is very unfortunate for this country that
the Republican leader in the Senate said, and I quote--I am not quoting
directly the words, but this is what he said--that his highest priority
was making President Obama a one-term President, and he is carrying it
out on the floor of this Senate.
The things he blames this President for are unbelievable. The way he
attacks the President for being out around the country--he doesn't
attack the Republican candidates for President for traveling around the
country. Let's face it, it is a few months to the election. Does he
expect the President to stay in the White House? I am glad the
President is getting outside. I am glad the President is making
speeches. I am glad the President is fighting for students. I am glad
the President is fighting for senior citizens. I am glad the President
is fighting for small business. I am glad he is fighting for fairness.
Why should a billionaire pay a lower tax rate than a secretary? I am
glad this President is doing all that. To hear him attacked day after
day after day is absolutely discouraging when we have so much work we
can do that we can talk about in our leader time. But I have decided I
am going to follow this, and every time Senator McConnell does this I
am going to use my privileges as a Senator to come down.
Let's never forget, this President inherited the worst economy since
the Great Depression from a Republican President who left us bleeding
800,000 jobs a month, who left us with an auto industry flat on its
back, who left us with a credit system that was frozen. This President,
through his leadership, stepped up and led us out of that mess. The
other voices, the naysayers, said: Let Detroit go bankrupt. Stay out of
everything. This President didn't listen because he is a fighter for
change.
If this floor is going to be used to attack this President, count me
in to stand and make sure the record is set straight. I hope we can go
back to the work we need to do instead of using the floor of this great
body to attack our President, the President of the United States of
America. Everyone has a right to do it. Believe me, I don't argue that.
But I also have the right as a Senator--and so do others--to come to
clear the record on that, and I intend to do that.
I yield the floor.
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