[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 128 (Thursday, September 20, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H6160-H6161]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEQUESTRATION TRANSPARENCY ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Oregon (Ms. Bonamici) for 5 minutes.
Ms. BONAMICI. Mr. Speaker, during the month of August, I had held
several town hall meetings throughout my district in Oregon. In these
meetings, I've done a summary of the work that we're doing here in
Congress and then opened the floor for questions from and discussions
with my constituents.
Without fail, in every town hall meeting at least one person would
ask about the partisan rancor and the gridlock that's come to
characterize Washington. They would ask me: Can you tell us something
that's bipartisan that you've done, something where you've worked
together, some achievement that everyone's agreed on.
[[Page H6161]]
Now, in responding to them, I've often discussed a piece of
legislation that's very important to the debate on budget priorities
and the so-called ``fiscal cliff''; that's the Sequestration
Transparency Act. This bill passed the Budget Committee by voice vote
and was later approved in the House, with only two in opposition. After
the Senate passed it with unanimous consent, the President signed it
into law. So this was truly a bipartisan effort, a statement by almost
every one of us working together that we're concerned about the impact
that sequestration might have on our constituents, and an effort to get
more information about the true harm that that sequestration will
cause.
Now, following the administration's recent report detailing those
cuts that would come under sequestration, I am even more concerned than
before, and my constituents are concerned. And I know constituents all
across this country are concerned as well. Mr. Speaker, there is
bipartisan concern about the impact that sequestration might have, and
yet we haven't been able to come to a bipartisan consensus to avoid it.
We've identified a problem; now we must identify a solution. This
should be a balanced solution, working together, and I look forward to
working with all of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to arrive
at that solution. It's a solution for my district in Oregon, for all of
the great State, and, importantly, for all of this great Nation.
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