[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 165 (Thursday, December 20, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H7364-H7374]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1230
PROVIDING FOR CONSIDERATION OF CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 4310, NATIONAL
DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2013
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, by direction of the Committee on
Rules, I call up House Resolution 840 and ask for its immediate
consideration.
[[Page H7365]]
The Clerk read the resolution, as follows:
H. Res. 840
Resolved, That upon adoption of this resolution it shall be
in order to consider the conference report to accompany the
bill (H.R. 4310) to authorize appropriations for fiscal year
2013 for military activities of the Department of Defense,
for military construction, and for defense activities of the
Department of Energy, to prescribe military personnel
strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes. All
points of order against the conference report and against its
consideration are waived. The conference report shall be
considered as read. The previous question shall be considered
as ordered on the conference report to its adoption without
intervening motion except: (1) one hour of debate; and (2)
one motion to recommit if applicable.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Utah is recognized for 1
hour.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, for the purpose of debate only, I
yield the customary 30 minutes to the gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr.
McGovern), pending which I yield myself such time as I may consume.
During consideration of this resolution, all time yielded is for the
purpose of debate only.
General Leave
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. I ask unanimous consent that all Members may have
5 legislative days in which they may revise and extend their remarks.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Utah?
There was no objection.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. As is customary for this conference report, this
is a closed rule which provides for the consideration of the conference
report to accompany H.R. 4310, the Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2013, and provides 1 hour of general debate, with 30 minutes
equally divided and controlled by the chair and the ranking minority
member of the House Armed Services Committee.
I'm actually pleased to stand before the House today in support of
the rule as well as the underlying legislation, which was H.R. 4310,
and the conference report that accompanies the Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2013.
I also have to, at the beginning, thank the chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee, Mr. McKeon, for his hard work and his steady
leadership on this bill, as well as the ranking member, Mr. Smith of
Washington, for continuing the time-honored tradition of close
cooperation and bipartisanship when it comes to defense and producing
this conference report. I also thank the professional staff, which has
worked closely together on literally hundreds of very difficult and
often very technical issues and has done so cooperatively in an
extremely responsible manner.
I'm very proud that the Armed Services Committee produced a bill in a
very bipartisan manner. I'm proud of the floor of the House who voted
and passed, in a bipartisan way, this bill back in May. The Senate has
finally decided to pass the bill in December. That the Senate has
passed a bill is commendable. It is unusual, but it is also
commendable. The fact that they have done this here gives us an
opportunity of passing one of the few bills that must be done in every
session of Congress. The Senate's procrastination on this effort is one
of the things that is worrisome. I only hope that in the years to come,
the Senate majority leadership will return to acting expeditiously,
deliberately, and in a more timely manner in something that is this
important.
It is actually a testament to the competency and professionalism of
the House Armed Services Committee staff, the House leadership staff,
and the Rules Committee staff that this enormous and complex conference
agreement could be rescued at the end of what is becoming an otherwise
contentious lame-duck session.
Mr. Speaker, in our Rules Committee meeting the other day, we had the
opportunity of having Mr. Hastings and others refer to the
Constitution. It is very significant that in the beginning of the
Constitution, the Preamble, that we talked about creating a more
perfect Union. A more perfect Union is not a grammatical flaw that was
introduced by the Founding Fathers. It had a specific historical
context. It also talked about preserving or promoting domestic
tranquility, which had, also, a specific historical context which had
nothing to do with America being sedate or tranquil. It had something
to do with the specific concept of private property. It also talked
about promoting general welfare, even though they had a uniquely
different idea of the word ``general'' than we have today.
But in providing in the intermediary with all these provisions is
also the word that we are supposed to provide for the common defense.
It was not unusual that that word was in there, put in by Gouverneur
Morris and the rest of them.
When the Founding Fathers met to write our Constitution, they were
looking at the historical milieu of the day and the concepts that were
going on at that time. They responded in a way to try to make sure that
they solved the problems of the day in a way that would never come up
again. The concept of providing for the common defense became one of
the core constitutional responsibilities that was extremely
significant.
We had won the Revolutionary War, but we had also--several of the
States--violated the treaty with Britain. The inability of some States
to protect Tory property had given the British the reason to continue
to have armed British soldiers on American soil or British forts on
American soil. We could not, under the Articles of Confederation,
control our borders. The British were arming subgroups coming in here
to do more than just destroy our domestic tranquility, but also to take
down and harm the lives of Americans. It seems some things never
change.
But the Articles of Confederation and Congress could not respond to
this. They had an Army of only 700 people. There was no Navy to control
the shipping or protect our shipping rights. The Articles of
Confederation and Congress realized what we should also realize that if
we do not have an adequate and strong defense, not only can we not
militarily defend this country, but we don't have the ability of
diplomatically trying to reach solutions to problems without resorting
to military efforts. They realized that this was one of the flaws of
America when they wrote the Constitution.
So it is not unusual for them to specifically put in here that one of
the responsibilities that this House has is to provide for the common
defense. It is not unusual that in article I, section 8, there are 17
clauses. Seven of those 17 clauses, as well as the introduction, talk
about the necessity of military defense and military preparedness for
this country. They recognized how significant that was, not just for
defending militarily, but also for the future and the diplomatic
abilities of the future United States.
This bill deals with one of the few core constitutional
responsibilities that we had. Fortunately, over the past 51 years,
Congress has been able to come together in an amazingly bipartisan way
to come up with a Defense authorization bill that provides our Defense
agencies the ability to function, to train, to equip our forces, and to
provide for our military personnel and their families.
We are betting if we do not do this, that the large-scale threats to
our national security will be so far in the future we can just sort of
tread water. I hope sometimes that they are right, but that treading
would not be what the Founding Fathers would look at as providing for
the common defense.
In a real world, there would be what I would consider to be a more
significant and effective bill, but we're not dealing with the real
world. We are dealing, though, with real-world issues. Part of the
issue is that we are looking at a world that is extremely dangerous for
us--we do not know what the future enemy will be--and we are also
dealing with a world in which we are continually trying to diminish our
military presence.
Our Navy is smaller than it has been since 1917. Our Army will be
smaller than it was at the beginning of World War II. Our Air Force is
the smallest it has ever been in the history of this country, with the
oldest planes that we've ever had. Those issues are issues that are
significant, they are important, and they must be addressed. And those
are going to be ongoing, long-term issues.
[[Page H7366]]
This particular bill does not do as much to address that particular
problem and give us the security of the future as I wish it could do.
That's only because we are not dealing in a perfect world where we can
establish the setting that we wish to do. We have to deal with the
setting in which we find ourselves.
{time} 1240
Having said that, there are a lot of things in this particular
conference report and in the House-passed bill which are very, very
positive, and they do move us forward. As we continue the discussion of
this rule as well as the debate of the conference report on the floor,
we will talk about some of those things that are positive and that do
move us forward.
With that, Mr. Speaker, I look forward to the continuing discussion
about talking about what is, indeed, in this particular bill.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. I want to thank the gentleman from Utah for the time,
and I yield myself such time as I may consume.
I rise in opposition to the underlying bill, the National Defense
Authorization bill.
I recognize and appreciate all of the hard work that went into
crafting this conference report--on both sides of the aisle. I commend
Chairman McKeon and Ranking Member Smith and all their staffs for all
of the work that they have done. I especially appreciate that the final
version of the bill includes a modified version of the Merkley
amendment on Afghanistan that was approved by the United States Senate,
but unfortunately, the final product contains policies that I simply
cannot support.
The bill increases funding--beyond the Pentagon's request--for
several programs, including a new missile defense base on the east
coast. The bill also denies the Pentagon the opportunity to save money
with its failure to include a cut to the contractor comp cap, its
failure to include a round of base closures, and its failure to
implement end-strength troop reductions even though we are supposedly
ending our involvement in two wars.
At a time when Congress is being asked to look for savings, even
considering cutting vital programs like Social Security, it is
unconscionable to me that we would continue to mandate wasteful funding
that the military has said it does not need and does not want. How can
we look into the eyes of a senior citizen who is living off of Social
Security and tell him that his cost-of-living adjustment will be
smaller so that we can buy weapons that the military doesn't even want?
Also very troubling to me is that this bill continues to prevent the
President from fulfilling his commitment to close the Guantanamo Bay
prison camp by imposing unnecessary and ill-advised transfer
restrictions. Mr. Speaker, I am proud to serve as the cochair of the
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission. We constantly and appropriately
criticize other countries for their lack of transparency and adherence
to the rule of law. The continued existence of Guantanamo undermines
our standing around the world. The President has said repeatedly that
he wants to close Guantanamo. There is broad bipartisan support among
national security experts for him to do so. Congress just needs to get
out of the way.
Mr. Speaker, while I support a great deal of this bill, especially
programs and services for our veterans and military retirees, I cannot
support a bill this large when we are in the middle of negotiations on
the so-called ``fiscal cliff.'' The Pentagon is more willing than this
Congress to look at the defense budget and make thoughtful but
significant reductions. This bill continues to show that, when it comes
to defense spending, Congress is part of the problem, not part of the
solution.
I would like to insert into the Record an article that appeared in
today's Washington Post by Walter Pincus, entitled, ``Military funds to
spare?,'' in which he quotes Secretary of Defense Panetta in a speech.
He said that the committees here in the Congress ``had diverted about
$74 billion of what we asked for in savings in our proposed budget to
the Congress, and they diverted them to other areas that, frankly, we
don't need.'' That is from the Secretary of Defense.
I would also like to insert into the Record a letter to the President
that was sent to Members of Congress as well, urging that he veto the
National Defense Authorization Act because it extends restrictions on
transferring detainees out of the Guantanamo prison.
Mr. Speaker, let me just conclude my opening here by saying that I
want a defense second to none. I believe that we need to do whatever we
need to do to protect the citizens of this country, but just throwing
more money at the Pentagon doesn't mean that you're getting a stronger
defense. Expanding the bloat and the waste in the Pentagon does nothing
to enhance our national security. We need a new definition of
``national security,'' one that includes things like jobs for our
citizens, one that includes access to a good quality education, one
that includes a strong infrastructure, one that includes good health
care for everybody in this country, an end to homelessness, and an end
to hunger in the United States of America.
I say this because, after we debate this rule, we're going to take up
another rule dealing with the so-called ``Plan B'' and ``Plan C,'' and
maybe there's a Plan D and a Plan E, who knows. What is particularly
troublesome to me is that, in the tax version of what the Republicans
are going to bring to the floor later, it includes things like ending
programs that benefit middle-income families and poor families.
Under their proposal, 25 million working families with tens of
millions of children will pay an average of $1,000 more in taxes.
That's not fair. That undermines the economic security of that family.
Under their proposal, 11 million families would lose a tax credit
that helps pay for college. How is that in our security? We're told
time and time again by all of the experts that, in order for us to
continue to be an economic global power, we need a well-educated
workforce. So what are they proposing? That 11 million families lose
their tax credits to help pay for college.
Fifty million seniors and other Medicare enrollees' health care would
be jeopardized as doctors face a 27 percent cut in Medicare payments
under this proposal. That's just the tax version of what they're
proposing. We haven't even gotten to what they're proposing in terms of
spending cuts.
So here we are, talking about a Defense Authorization Act that is
more money than our Pentagon wants, that is more money than our Joint
Chiefs of Staff want, that is more money than the Secretary of Defense
wants. As we're doing this, we're telling the American people that we
have to lower your cost-of-living adjustment on Social Security, that
we have to lower your quality of health care, that we have to cut some
money from housing programs, that we have to cut SNAP and food stamps
so that you won't have enough to eat.
This is crazy. This is crazy. So, yes, we're all for a military and a
defense second to none, but I will tell you that some of our biggest
threats are not halfway around the world--they're halfway down the
block. We have to start paying attention to what's happening in this
country, so I urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' on this bill.
I reserve the balance of my time.
[From the Washington Post, Dec. 19, 2012]
Military Funds to Spare?
(By Walter Pincus)
Congress and Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta showed this
week that there are hundreds of millions, if not billions, of
loose dollars in the Pentagon's budget that can be shifted
around without apparent harm to national security.
In a speech Wednesday at the National Press Club, Panetta
voiced his frustration at changes the House and Senate armed
services committees had made in the fiscal 2013 defense
authorization bill. At one point he said that the committees
``had diverted about $74 billion of what we asked for in
savings in our proposed budget to the Congress, and they
diverted them to other areas that, frankly, we don't need.''
He spoke about ``pressure on the department to retain
excess force structure and infrastructure instead of
investing in the training and equipment that makes our force
agile and flexible and ready.'' Without specifying programs,
Panetta mentioned having to keep ``aircraft, ships, tanks,
bases, even those that have outlived their usefulness, [but]
have a natural political constituency.''
As if on cue, just two hours after Panetta's speech, the
chairmen of the Senate and House armed services committees--
Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and Rep. Howard P. ``Buck''
[[Page H7367]]
McKeon (R-Calif.)--released summaries of the House-Senate
conference report on the fiscal 2013 defense bill that
contained funding changes illustrating some of what Panetta
had been complaining about.
For example, the conferees approved more than $500 million
to continue the Global Hawk Block 30, high-altitude, long-
endurance unmanned aircraft that have integrated imagery,
radar and intelligence sensors. The Pentagon had decided to
risk terminating this version of Global Hawk (there are
others in use and being built) and noted that it would save
$800 million in fiscal 2013 and $2.5 billion over the next
five years.
Two other congressional add-ons illustrate members' desire
to keep plant production lines open--and jobs filled. They
were $136 million to upgrade the M1 Abrams tank and $140
million to modify the M2 Bradley armored vehicle. And $45
million was added to funds to purchase F-18s to hold open
``the option of buying more'' in fiscal 2014. In the nuclear
area, Congress added $70 million toward construction of a
$3.7 billion building for research on plutonium at the Los
Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico that the
administration wanted to delay for two more years.
Two other congressional favorites got boosts beyond what
the Pentagon approved. One was an added $152 million for
missile defense; the other, for $143 million, went to Special
Operations Command for an imagery intelligence program its
commander wanted but higher-level officials vetoed. The
conferees' message: What Special Ops wants, it gets.
One compromise reached over the past month involved the
administration's controversial plan to reorganize military
air transport assets that affected Air National Guard bases
around the country, a step that mobilized opposition not just
from Congress but from governors of the states involved. The
solution was to halt the retirement of 26 C-5A aircraft,
``holding the strategic airlift total at 301 aircraft, until
the Defense Department completes a comprehensive study of air
mobility requirements,'' according to the House committee. In
addition, the Air Force will maintain an additional 32 C-130
or C-27J tactical airlift aircraft, some of which were going
to be retired.
As he has in the past, Panetta said that health-care costs
for the military were growing fast and had hit $50 billion
this year. The need was for some cost controls, but the
conferees blocked any increase in fees for the Defense
Department's heath-care program, known as TRICARE, or any
effort to establish new ones.
Meanwhile, the conferees took steps to cap the rate under
which the Army and Marine Corps reduce force numbers over the
next five years. And somehow they found excess funds to
provide provisions to ease the blow to the roughly 100,000
service personnel that are let go. Those individuals will be
permitted to reside in military housing with their families
for six months after their date of separation and use
commissary and exchange stores for two years after
separation.
There was one $188 million reduction that neither Panetta
nor the conferees touched--the one for military bands.
The Army maintains 99 bands, many of them National Guard-
based, and intends to spend $221.1 million on them during
fiscal 2013. That's up $3.3 million from fiscal 2012. The
Navy has 14 bands that will cost an estimated $55.6 million
next year, while the Marine Corps has 12 bands that will cost
$53.6 million in 2013. The Air Fe has 12 active-duty and 11
Air National Guard bands. Together they cost an estimated $58
million.
____
Re: VETO the National Defense Authorization Act Because It Extends
Restrictions on Transferring Detainees Out of the Guantanamo Prison
Dear President Obama: The undersigned human rights,
religious, and civil liberties groups strongly urge you to
veto the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2013 (NDAA) because it would impede your ability to close
Guantanamo. Specifically, the NDAA conference bill restricts
the Executive Branch's authority to transfer detainees for
repatriation or resettlement in foreign countries or for
prosecution in federal criminal court for the full fiscal
year.
Your commitment to close the Guantanamo prison was a
hallmark of your 2008 campaign and a signal to everyone, both
across America and around the globe, of a renewed commitment
to the rule of law. Your executive order, on your second full
day as president, directing the government to close the
prison should have heralded the end of the prison, but
instead triggered a long series of failures and obstacles to
its closure. There are still 166 detainees left at
Guantanamo, and the promise of closing the prison remains
unfulfilled.
We appreciate that you publicly renewed your commitment to
closing Guantanamo in public comments this fall, and we
strongly believe that you can accomplish this objective
during your second term. You can still make the successful
closing of the Guantanamo prison an important part of your
historic legacy.
However, if the NDAA is signed with any transfer
restrictions in it, the prospects for Guantanamo being closed
during your presidency will be severely diminished, if not
gone altogether. The current statutory restrictions on
transfer expire on March 27, 2013. Those restrictions--which
have been in place for nearly two years with zero detainees
being certified for transfer overseas and zero detainees
transferred to the United States for prosecution--are
functionally similar to the restrictions in the NDAA bill
pending in Congress. If extended for the entire fiscal year,
then nearly a year of your second term could be lost, and the
political capital required to start closing it later in your
next term will be even greater.
Now is the time to end the statutory restrictions on
closing Guantanamo, by vetoing the NDAA because it extends
them. When signing earlier versions of these restrictions
into law, you stated, ``my Administration will work with the
Congress to seek repeal of these restrictions, will seek to
mitigate their effects, and will oppose any attempt to extend
or expand them in the future.'' The restrictions have proven
unworkable, and should not be extended for yet another year.
There is broad support among national security and foreign
policy leaders for closing Guantanamo. Your own national
security and foreign policy leadership team shares your
commitment to closing Guantanamo. The list of leaders who
support closing the Guantanamo prison is long, and crosses
party lines, including: former President George W. Bush,
former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, former Secretary
of State Colin Powell, former Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates, former National Security Advisor James Jones, General
Charles C. Krulak (ret.) former Commandant of the Marine
Corps, General Joseph P. Hoar (ret.), former CETCOM
commander, and Brigadier General Michael Lehnert (ret.), who
set up the Guantanamo prison, and 25 retired admirals and
generals. Closing Guantanamo is good human rights policy and
good national security policy.
We realize that there is a long tradition of the NDAA being
enacted annually. However, an annual NDAA is not required for
the Department of Defense to carry out its functions. The
NDAA does not fund the Department of Defense, and all of its
provisions can be either implemented by agency action or
enacted as part of other legislation. Four of your five
immediate predecessors--Presidents Carter, Reagan, Clinton,
and George W. Bush--each vetoed an NDAA. Restrictions
impeding the closing of the Guantanamo prison clearly warrant
a veto by you.
We believe that you will be far more likely to succeed in
fulfilling your commitment to closing the Guantanamo prison
if the transfer restrictions are allowed to expire on March
27, We strongly urge you to veto the NDAA, because it
includes an extension of the restrictions on transferring
detainees out of Guantanamo for either repatriation or
resettlement overseas or prosecution in the United States.
Thank you for your attention to this request.
Sincerely,
American Civil Liberties Union, American Friends Service
Committee, Amnesty International USA, Appeal for Justice,
Bill of Rights Defense Committee, Brennan Center for
Justice, Center for Constitutional Rights, Center for
International Policy, Center for Victims of Torture,
Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, Council on
American-Islamic Relations, Defending Dissent Foundation,
Disciples Justice Action Network, Friends Committee on
National Legislation, Human Rights Watch, International
Justice Network, Japanese American Citizens League,
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, National
Religious Campaign Against Torture, Peace Action,
Presbyterian Church (USA) Office of Public Witness,
Physicians for Human Rights, Psychologists for Social
Responsibility, Rabbis for Human Rights--North America,
United Church of Christ Justice and Witness Ministries,
United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and
Society, Unitarian Universalist Association, Win Without
War.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, at this time, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Eddie Bernice Johnson).
Ms. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON of Texas. Let me thank the ranking member
and chairman of the Rules Committee.
Today, I rise to discuss just one portion of the National Defense
Authorization Act. It is a section of the conference report that
supports our Nation's first responders, and I signed the conference
report for that section only.
In July of last year, I introduced legislation to reauthorize two
programs--the Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program, the AFG
Program, and the Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response
Program, the SAFER Program. These programs were created to help local
fire departments across the country maintain and increase their
capacity to do all that we ask them to do each day, including fighting
fires, responding to medical emergencies, and providing safety and aid
in the face of disasters, either natural or manmade.
[[Page H7368]]
Maintaining the equipment, training, and personnel to safely and
swiftly respond to calls for assistance is increasingly difficult. Fire
departments around the country have been forced to lay off firefighters
and to do without needed equipment and training. The fire grant
programs have played an important role in helping local fire
departments overcome some of these challenges, providing over $6
billion in assistance since the year 2000. These grants have been
essential to maintaining public safety in many communities, and they're
even more important in the face of our shrinking local budgets.
Fire is a serious problem in the United States, killing over 3,000
people a year, which is a rate higher than in all other industrialized
countries. Additionally, each year, nearly 20,000 people are injured,
over 100 firefighters are killed in the line of duty, and $10 billion
in property is lost due to fire.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. McGOVERN. I yield the gentlelady an additional 1 minute.
Ms. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON of Texas. Thank you very much.
In my State of Texas, 2011 was an especially destructive year, with 4
million acres burned, over 5,500 homes and structures destroyed, and
hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to discuss just one portion of the National
Defense Authorization Act--a section of the conference report that
supports our nation's first responders. In July of last year, I
introduced legislation to reauthorize two programs--the Assistance for
Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program and the Staffing for Adequate Fire and
Emergency Response (SAFER) program. These programs were created to help
local fire departments across the country maintain and increase their
capacity to do all that we ask of them each day, including fighting
fires, responding to medical emergencies, and providing safety and aid
in the face of disasters either natural or man-made.
Maintaining the equipment, training, and personnel to safely and
swiftly respond to calls for assistance is increasingly difficult. Fire
departments around the country have been forced to lay off firefighters
and to do without needed equipment and training. The fire grant
programs have played an important role in helping local fire
departments overcome some of these challenges, providing over $6
billion in assistance since 2000. These grants have been essential to
maintaining public safety in many communities and they are even more
important in the face of shrinking local budgets.
Fire is a serious problem in the United States, killing over 3,000
people a year--a rate higher than all other industrialized countries.
Additionally, each year nearly 20,000 people are injured, over 100
firefighters are killed in the line of duty, and $10 billion in
property is lost due to fire. In my State of Texas, 2011 was an
especially destructive year with 4 million acres burned, over 5,500
homes and structures destroyed, and hundreds of millions of dollars in
damages.
Statistics show that minorities and low-income Americans are
disproportionately the victims of fires. In addition to providing the
resources necessary to ensure our fire departments have the equipment
and personnel they need, the United States Fire Administration, which
is also reauthorized in the conference report, supports fire prevention
and safety activities, promotes the professional development of the
fire and emergency response community, and conducts research, testing,
and evaluation to help reduce fire deaths, injuries, and loss.
We need to ensure that our firefighters and emergency medical
personnel have the tools that they need to protect us. Reauthorization
of the fire grant programs and the United States Fire Administration
will do just that.
The good news is that, even in these times of increasing
partisanship, these common sense provisions have once again garnered
widespread support. I am pleased that the bipartisan co-chairs of the
Congressional Fire Services Caucus have joined me in supporting the
reauthorization of these critical programs. As the Ranking Member of
the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee, which has
jurisdiction over these programs, I hope the rest of my colleagues will
join us in supporting these provisions.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, at this time, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Kucinich).
{time} 1250
Mr. KUCINICH. In this discussion over the NDAA, we arrive at a moment
where we meet the moral consequences of our Nation's choices over the
past decade. We chose war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, Yemen,
Somalia, and perhaps later on Iran. Inexplicably, we've created
openings for al Qaeda and radical fundamentalists as a result of our
interventions. At home, we choose a false notion of security over
personal freedom, even if it means we look the other way when the very
language of this bill opens the door for indefinite detentions of
Americans. And we choose poverty over plenty by giving over a half
trillion dollars to the Pentagon and nearly $90 billion for wars,
including Afghanistan, while facing reductions in domestic spending.
We put war on the Nation's credit card, including a $5 trillion
charge for the war in Iraq, which was based on lies. We gather at a
fiscal cliff of our own making and refuse to see the implications of
our unrestrained spending for war. But when it comes to providing for
the long-term security of our seniors, a cynical ploy using the
Consumer Price Index is being used to cut seniors' Social Security
benefits.
When did America become more concerned about the control of and the
security of foreign lands than the retirement security of our own
people? Unending war abroad means austerity here at home. It's caviar
for the Pentagon and cat food for seniors. Our choices are being made,
but when will we choose for America jobs for all, education for all,
health care for all, housing opportunities for all, retirement security
for all? When will we choose freedom over fear? When will we break the
hold which fear has over this Nation and our budget choices?
I'm voting ``no'' on this bill.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
In the cacophonous list of things that this bill does not do, one can
even look at some other areas. I mean, there are other areas in which
we have problems in the defense of this country and future challenges
that are before us, even in the modernization of our weapons system.
Even as Russia has fielded new and modernized nuclear ICBMs, the U.S.
land-based nuclear deterrence is in need of future modernization; and
yet this administration has cut resources to begin planning for the
upgrading and modernization of our ICBMs and related nuclear-based
systems that have largely been ignored. This trend simply cannot
continue.
But having recognized those problems that are there, it is also time
to realize what this bill actually does that moves us, as a Nation,
forward:
It will provide $552 billion, which is $2 billion more than the
President requested, and that is a plus;
It increases the pay for our all-voluntary forces by 1.7 percent and
provides critical bonuses for those who are now working in harm's way;
It keeps the faith with the military retirees and our veterans in
regard to TRICARE, and rejects the administration's proposal to
increase fees and copayments on them;
It deals with the issue of troop reduction in a responsible way by
putting caps on the number of troop reductions that can be placed in a
single year;
It has a conscience clause for servicemen and for chaplains;
It implements the Hyde amendment;
It addresses sexual assault with bipartisan, specific new regulations
and procedures for combating and prosecuting sexual assaults within the
military;
It has a total new program to provide and help with suicide
prevention for dealing with those people who have volunteered to
represent this country in the military;
It opens up new bipartisan reforms for competition and innovation in
the way the Department deals with small businesses and spurs on
innovation;
It deals with strategic forces like the NNSA reforms, our nuclear
oversight, our missile defense system, the Iron Dome;
Its provisions dealing with Guantanamo Bay, which prohibit the
transfer of detainees to the United States, are the exact right thing
that should be done;
It also looks at retaining our vital systems like our naval cruisers,
our airlift capacities, Global Hawk, the anti-armor, and investing in
new future capabilities that we need like airborne electronic warfare.
The aircraft that we need, the submarines, the destroyers that happen
to be there; and,
[[Page H7369]]
indeed, it has a section in there dealing with the sanctions on Iran.
All of those are specific and important to us.
We have a responsibility to make sure that this core constitutional
responsibility of ours is done efficiently. I want it to be known that
those who are in the military uniform must respond to the higher-ups
which they are dealing with. The Secretary of Defense must deal with
walking a line of talking about what they have to do and what they wish
they could do. In no way does anyone in uniform say that things that
are put in this budget is something that they do not need or do not
want.
We have cut the military in this country when we were cutting nothing
else. While we were running up stimulus bills, we were still cutting
the military. We cut them in the last 2 years of the Bush
administration. Under Secretary Gates, it was a $400 billion cut. All
told, the cuts that this Congress has put on the fence when it has not
cut other areas is between $800 billion and $1 trillion, and that
doesn't even count what could happen within sequestration.
We seem to forget, as we're looking, and we take some of the things
we have here for granted. The United States has had air superiority
since the Korean War, which means our men on the ground, when they hear
something overhead, don't have to worry about whose insignia will be on
that plane; they know it is ours. But if, indeed, we do not upgrade and
innovate and improve our air capacity, we don't have that in the
future.
And what we do now is not just simply what we can do today; what we
are authorizing in this bill is what we can do 20 years from now. If we
don't start the research and development today, we will not have that
capacity.
I reject those who say, Look, the F-35 is too expensive; let's just
build more F-16s--even though Third World countries have planes that
have the same capacity technologically as our F-16s and our F-15s. What
we need is a new generation, so if our men are put into a fight, it
will not be a fair one.
And we have the technology, the new generation of technology to make
sure that we are in the forefront and to make sure that we maintain
that air dominance into the future. It is something that we have had
for so long and we have had so many people work so hard to maintain
that we here, today, seem to sometimes take it for granted. And we
ought not. This is our future. This bill is about our future, and we
cannot--we cannot--simply go back because we wish to change the milieu
of what is happening here. This is a good bill.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
First of all, we have air superiority over every country in the
world. We have the strongest military in the world, and I'm proud of
the men and women who serve in our military.
But, you know, we have to make choices here. I mean, do we really
need all these troops deployed in Europe that have been there basically
since World War II? I mean, I don't think Germany is going to invade
France any time soon or Russia is going to invade Poland, but yet we
have a huge amount of deployed American forces in Europe. Maybe we need
to have a discussion about whether or not we need that, whether or not
we can afford that expense, whether or not it does anything to enhance
our security.
Again, I want a military that is the best in the world. I want them
to continue to be that way. I want them to be second to none. I want to
make sure that we have all that we need, but I don't want to be
investing in things we don't need. And when the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and when the Secretary of Defense and all of the experts tell us that
they don't need something, and we here appropriate money to keep
something going that is unnecessary, that is unwanted, at the same time
while you're trying to cut the benefits of some poor old lady on Social
Security, there's something wrong with this equation. We have to start
thinking about the security of people here in this country as well.
What we're going to do right after this is take up a rule that is
going to gut a whole bunch of programs that, quite frankly, keep people
from falling through the cracks--everything from food stamps to child
nutrition programs to education programs. Anything that helps anybody
who's in need is going to get walloped after the next rule is passed,
with a tax plan that is so blatantly unfair that I can't even believe
that my friends are bringing it to the floor of the House for a debate.
So, you know, let's talk about what we need to do to maintain the
security of our people in this country. We need a strong military. We
need to meet the challenges abroad, but we also need to meet the
challenges here in the United States of America. We need to focus on
things like jobs and affordable housing, making sure that people have
the ladders of opportunity so they can succeed. So that's where I
object.
{time} 1300
This bill is more than the people at the Pentagon want. We're just
throwing more money at this, and I think it's a mistake.
Mr. Speaker, at this time I'd like to yield 3 minutes to the
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I too believe in military
preparedness, coming from a State like Texas, where the population of
men and women who have served or are serving in the United States
military is renowned and appreciated.
As I look at the tourists who walk through the Halls, I wonder which
of those young people will take an oath and join the United States
military. And so when I see raises for the troops, it pleases, I think,
all of us.
I'm concerned about the Afghanistan timeline. I had hoped that it
could be expedited. I certainly do commend the Iron Dome because we saw
it work with respect to Israel. I question, however, the drones that
may have collateral damage.
But I do think it's important that this bill does, in fact, make a
commitment to protecting the women and children in Afghanistan,
responds to the issues dealing with sexual assault against military
personnel, and particularly women, and is strong on Iran sanctions.
But I rise today as well because I think when we talk about people,
and we talk about the men and women of the United States military, we
talk about their health. And yesterday, in the Rules Committee I raised
this point and I raise it again.
I'm going to support this bill because I think it'll make a leap of
faith and commitment to finding the cause of triple negative breast
cancer. I mentioned yesterday in the Rules Committee that triple
negative breast cancer cells are usually of a higher grade and size,
onset at a younger age, more aggressive and more likely to metastasize.
In fact, the survival rate for breast cancer, but on triple negative,
people are diagnosed and they die in months, maybe a year, such as my
constituent, Yvonne Williams, a wonderful health professional who left
a husband and two children.
Or maybe the young lady who stopped me when I was walking in the Race
for the Cure and said, my mother, a Hispanic woman, got triple negative
breast cancer. We did everything we could, and she died within months.
Apart from surgery, the only relief is cytotoxic chemotherapy, its
only available treatment. Targeted molecular treatments, while being
investigated, are not accepted treatment for this disease.
As I speak today, there are women who may be listening, or others who
realize that either their loved one or they may be diagnosed with
triple negative breast cancer, and they understand the impact. Whether
they are Caucasian or Asian or Hispanic or African American, this
disease has not been able to be treated like breast cancers in the
other stages.
So I offered an amendment that the House accepted. I think it is an
important amendment because what it spoke to is that we need to
pinpoint and focus in on what is the cause of this disease. And it
called for the triple negative breast cancer patients to be identified
earlier in the progression of their disease and to develop targets on
molecular and biomolecular issues.
But through that amendment, I must say, although I wanted the
specific language, the House was able to hold its position.
[[Page H7370]]
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. McGOVERN. I yield an additional 30 seconds to the gentlelady.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. The House was able to hold its position.
And on title VII, section 737, I want to say thank you. There is a long
amendment that includes my amendment and specifically speaks to having
a report that will have recommendations for changes to policy, a law
that could improve the prevention, early detection, awareness and
treatment of breast cancer among the Members of the Armed Forces.
I would ask the Defense Department that when you look at treatment
and research, you must include the triple negative breast cancer. That
is, as well, an attack on your personnel in the United States military.
If we care about our soldiers, our men and women in all of the branches
who serve us, we'll care about their health, and we will include that
research.
I thank the conferees for moving forward on something that is so near
and dear to the families of those who live, but certainly of those of
the families who have died.
Mr. Speaker, I am here today in support of language from my
Amendment, Number 91 to H.R. 4310 ``National Defense Authorization
Act,'' which would direct the Department of Defense Office of Health to
work in collaboration with the National Institutes of Health to
identify specific genetic and molecular targets and biomarkers for
Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC).
In addition, my amendment was intended to result in information
useful in biomarker selection, drug discovery, and clinical trials
design that will enable both TNBC patients to be identified earlier in
the progression of their disease and develop multiple targeted
therapies for the disease.
Unfortunately, my language was not included in the Senate Amendment
but I have read language in the Joint Manager's Statement and the
Conference Report does provide for a study.
The language reads, ``Study on incidence of breast cancer among
members of the Armed Forces serving on active duty,'' and is included
in Section 737.
I stand up for all women today who have been victims and really for
those who might so that we can look into prevention, cure, and
eradication of breast cancer.
Triple negative breast cancer is a specific strain of breast cancer
for which no targeted treatment is available. The American Cancer
Society calls this particular strain of breast cancer ``an aggressive
subtype associated with lower survival rates.''
I offer this amendment in hopes that through a coordinated effort,
DOD and NIH can develop a targeted treatment for the triple negative
breast cancer strain.
Breast cancers with specific, targeted treatment methods, such as
hormone and gene based strains, have higher survival rates than the
triple negative subtype, highlighting the need for a targeted
treatment.
Today, breast cancer accounts for 1 in 4 cancer diagnoses among women
in this country. It is also the most commonly diagnosed cancer among
African American women. The American Cancer society estimates that in
2011, more than 26,000 African American women will be diagnosed with
breast cancer, and another 6,000 will die from the disease.
Between 2002 and 2007, African American women suffered a 39 percent
higher death rate from breast cancer than other groups.
African American women are also 12 percent less likely to survive
five years after a breast cancer diagnosis. One reason for this
disparity is that African American women are disproportionally affected
by triple negative breast cancer.
More than 30 percent of all breast cancer diagnoses in African
American are of the triple negative variety. Black women are far more
susceptible to this dangerous subtype than white or Hispanic women.
THE STORY OF YOLANDA WILLIAMS
Mr. Speaker, last year, I spoke at a funeral for Yolanda Williams,
one of my constituents in the 18th Congressional District of Texas.
Yolanda died from her battle with triple negative breast cancer. Like
many other women who are diagnosed with this aggressive strain, she did
not respond to treatment. Yolanda, wife and mother of two daughters,
was only 44 years old.
This strain of breast cancer is not only more aggressive, it is also
harder to detect, and more likely to recur than other types. Because
triple negative breast cancer is difficult to detect, it often
metastasizes to other parts of the body before diagnosis. 70 percent of
women with metastatic triple negative breast cancer do not live more
than five years after being diagnosed.
Research institutions all over the Nation have started to focus on
this dangerous strain of breast cancer. In my home City of Houston,
Baylor College of Medicine has its best and brightest minds working
tirelessly to develop a targeted treatment for the triple negative
breast cancer subtype. It is time for the Department of Defense to
follow that example and commit additional funding to study the triple
negative strain.
I had urged my colleagues to join me in protecting women across the
Nation from this deadly form of breast cancer by supporting my
amendment, and enough of them did so that language was sent to the
Senate addressing triple negative breast cancer; and we live to fight
another day for more precise language dedicated to a most-pernicious
form of breast cancer, while being appreciative of language in the
final conference report addressing breast cancer among those most at
risk, on active duty fighting, for our country.
FAST FACTS
Breast cancer accounts for 1 in 4 cancer diagnoses among women in
this country.
The survival rate for breast cancer has increased to 90 percent for
White women but only 78 percent for African American Women.
African American women are more likely to be diagnosed with larger
tumors and more advanced stages of breast cancer.
Triple-negative breast cancer, TNBC, is a term used to describe
breast cancers whose cells do not have estrogen receptors and
progesterone receptors, and do not have an excess of the HER2 protein
on their cell membrane of tumor cells.
Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) cells are usually of a higher
grade and size; onset at a younger age; more aggressive; more likely to
metastasize.
TNBC also referred to as basal-like (BL) due to their resemblance to
basal layer of epithelial cells.
There is not a formal detailed classification of system of the
subtypes of these cells.
TNBC is in fact a heterogeneous group of cancers with varying
differences in prognosis and survival rate between various subtypes.
This has led to a lot of confusion amongst both physicians and
patients.
Apart from surgery, cytotoxic chemotherapy is the only available
treatment; targeted molecular treatments while being investigated are
not accepted treatment.
Between 10-17 percent of female breast cancer patients have the
triple negative subtype.
Triple-negative breast cancer most commonly affect African American
women, followed by Hispanic women.
African American women have prevalence TNBC of 26 percent vs 16
percent in non-African-Americans women.
TNBC usually affects women under 50 years of age.
African American women have a prevalence of premenopausal breast
cancer of 26 percent vs 16 percent for non-African-American Women.
Women with TNBC have 3 times the risk of death than women with the
most common type of breast cancer.
Women with TNBC are more likely to have distance metastases in the
brain and lung and more common subtypes of breast cancer.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, it's my pleasure to yield 3 minutes to the
gentleman from Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer).
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, this defense authorization legislation
is a missed opportunity. Our Republican friends would have us approve
this at a time when we're struggling with the long-term fiscal
stability of the United States. We're set to pass a bill that
authorizes funding above what we approved in the Budget Control Act.
This is spending 20 percent above the Cold War average, double what we
had in 2001.
Even if somehow we went over that dreaded fiscal cliff and
sequestration kicked in, it would only reduce spending to what it was
in 2007, adjusted for inflation, when we were fighting two wars. It's a
missed opportunity.
I heard my friend from Utah talk about avoiding any increase in fee
in terms of health care. Excuse me?
We're looking at draconian impacts that some are suggesting for some
of our society's most vulnerable. And, here, we haven't adjusted a fee
since 1995.
The Department of Defense is going to spend $50 billion on health
care. It's gone up 300 percent since 2001. Ten million people are
involved, and they count it as a point of pride that we're not making
any adjustment at all? For a retired three or four star general earning
a pension of over $200,000 a year, 80 percent of whom go to work for
the defense industry, and they pay a $50 fee?
[[Page H7371]]
I'm sorry, I think it's a missed opportunity.
I heard my friend from Utah talk about the nuclear arsenal and
upgrading intercontinental ballistic missiles. I think this is a missed
opportunity. Look at the nuclear arsenal, we're spending over $55
billion a year--we don't know how much more because that information
isn't readily available--for weapons that have not enabled us to fight
in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Many of these weapons we can't use, will never use, but we're going
to spend $200 billion upgrading the arsenal over the next 10 years. And
we're looking at three separate delivery systems, including new
submarines at almost $5 billion a piece. Against whom?
We need a tiny fraction of this to deal with China or Russia. Our
nuclear arsenal isn't stopping Iran from trying to achieve its nuclear
weapon.
These are sad, missed opportunities to right-size the military, which
will still be the most powerful in the world, by far.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. McGOVERN. I yield the gentleman an additional 1 minute.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. For us to deal with the threats that we face today,
to deal with the damage that we have done in the reckless misguided war
in Iraq, to be able to deal meaningfully with the Guard and Ready
Reserve that should be upgraded and healed from the damage that was
inflicted upon them.
We can provide far more real security, save tax dollars, deal with
the needs of veterans that are about to be, sadly, undercut, and
provide balance to our budget. In fact, the fiscal instability from
reckless bills like this is, in fact, a national security threat.
We're no longer going to be able nor should we pay almost half the
world's entire military spending. We should start by rejecting this
authorization.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
I always hate to try and say we ought to learn lessons of history;
but the Founding Fathers, when they made that our core constitutional
responsibility, clearly understood that if you do not have a military
capacity, you do not have not only the ability to defend the country,
but you do not have the ability to make diplomatic efforts in any of
those areas.
It is interesting that our allies in NATO are spending far more of
their GDP on military defense than we are. But obviously, and
ironically, those who are are almost always those countries which
experienced firsthand what it was like to live under the domination of
the Soviet Union. They understand the significance of this particular
proposal and these particular kinds of bills.
Mr. Speaker, I would like at this time to recognize the soon-to-be-
retired chairman of the Rules Committee who has done so much in his
tenure here in the Capitol. I yield such time as he may consume to the
gentleman from California (Mr. Dreier).
{time} 1310
Mr. DREIER. I thank my friend from Brigham City. I appreciate his
generosity of yielding me such time as I may consume.
Mr. Speaker, let me just say that I appreciate the fact that my
friend from Worcester said we should have a defense capability that is
second to none. We should be preeminent in the world. I appreciate his
statement. I also appreciate the fact that he talks about the
multifarious societal needs that are out there, ensuring that we don't
see those who are struggling to make ends meet suffer. We concur
wholeheartedly in that goal. But I have said this time and time again.
I said it in the Rules Committee and Mr. Bishop and I had a discussion
about this. And Mr. Hastings of Fort Lauderdale got into there as well.
This is my perspective. Thomas Jefferson said that two thinking
people given the exact set of facts can draw different conclusions, but
I've concluded as I looked at the preamble to the Constitution with all
the important statements in there--We the people of the United States,
in order to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, ensure
domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the
general welfare, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the
United States--I argue, Mr. Speaker, that the five most important words
in the midst of that preamble are ``provide for the common defense.''
And the reason I say that is that as we look at all the things that
the Federal Government does, virtually all of them--not all, but
virtually all of them--can be handled by individuals, by communities,
cities, families, counties, and States. But there's one thing that
cannot be handled by those other entities, and that is our national
security. We can't have the individual States providing for the
national security. And that's why I believe it is the single most
important responsibility for the National Government.
I believe that we can have a cost-effective national defense. I
believe that we can correctly focus on waste. We know and have heard
the horror stories, and we've heard about some of the waste that's
taken place in the Pentagon. We've got to bring an end to that, no
doubt about it.
At the same time, my friend from Utah just talked about the fact that
our allies within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are spending a
greater percentage of their gross domestic product on national security
for the reason that they have felt threatened. They've lived under
repression. There are NATO allies that have been countries that were
basically under the control of the former Soviet Union. And in light of
that, they continue to live with an understanding of how important
national security is. We have important countries in Eastern and
Central Europe that are struggling to not only become members of the
European Union but to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
because they still are seeking a chance to be free of that kind of
repression.
I'm reminded of what took place during the 2008 Summer Olympics in
Georgia, when we saw the incursion from Vladimir Putin's Russia into
Georgia over the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. We
continue to see lots of threats. It is a very dangerous world.
Tragically, Plato said: Only the dead have seen the end of war.
And I remember that as we saw the demise of the Soviet Union, the
crumbling of the Berlin Wall, many of us did believe as Francis
Fukuyama famously wrote about the end of history, believing that
political pluralism, the rule of law, and self-determination and
democratic institutions would thrive all over the world. Well, it
hasn't quite worked out that way in the last couple of decades. And we
all know what the consequences of those threats have been. For the
first time ever, we had the kind of attack that we did on September 11
on our soil.
All this is to say, Mr. Speaker, it's important that we have a
strong, balanced defense authorization bill. And I believe that the
National Defense Authorization Act that is before us is right. And I
appreciated hearing the distinguished ranking member of the Committee
on Rules, Ms. Slaughter, praise the fact that it's focusing on some of
those very important social issues that she has raised and addressed.
She complimented this defense authorization conference report for doing
that.
And there are other things. This morning, I was listening to WAMU. I
wasn't aware of this, but I heard the Delegate from the District of
Columbia, Ms. Norton, talk about the fact that we are going to have
recognition of flags in the District of Columbia for our veterans. And
there's inclusion in this conference report that deals with that issue.
She pointed to the fact that flags are very, very important. When we
have foreign dignitaries come to the United States of America, flags
are used to recognize their presence. Of course, veterans from the
States across the country have that, but the District of Columbia
hasn't. I'm pleased that Ms. Norton was able to have that issue
addressed in the National Defense Authorization Act conference report.
And so this is a measure which I believe really transcends political
party. There's great bipartisan support for it. And it also covers lots
of important issues that do come back to our Nation's security. And so
I believe, Mr. Speaker, that as we look, again, at those five most
important words, from my perspective, in the middle of the preamble of
the U.S. Constitution,
[[Page H7372]]
``providing for the common defense,'' that we are doing that--and
exactly that--with this measure.
So I encourage my colleagues to support the rule and the conference
report that we will have. I believe it will be a great benefit to our
men and women in uniform and to the future security of the United
States of America and our allies.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, it is my pleasure to yield 1\1/2\ minutes
to the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Altmire).
Mr. ALTMIRE. Mr. Speaker, as we begin debate on this National Defense
Authorization Act, it's critical that we understand just how important
it is to our troops and to our country that we pass this legislation
with a bipartisan vote. It's easy to get bogged down in partisanship on
most issues, but this cannot be one of them. This legislation provides
the men and women of our Armed Forces the necessary equipment and
financial support to effectively carry out their duties while at the
same time protecting all of our national security. Our troops have
proven time and again that they are the most skilled forces in the
world, but we must provide them with the necessary support to help them
serve and protect our country.
Congress has an obligation to support the men and women who serve in
the Armed Forces and who sacrifice so much for us every day. Our
country owes them more than we can ever repay. And I strongly urge my
colleagues to honor and respect our Armed Forces by passing this bill
when it comes up later today and affording our troops the funding that
they need and deserve.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, it is my pleasure to yield 2\1/2\ minutes
to the gentlewoman from California (Ms. Lee).
Ms. LEE of California. Let me first thank Mr. McGovern for yielding
the time and your tremendous and tireless leadership on the Rules
Committee, but also for your leadership in protecting our young men and
women at home and providing strategies for how to bring them home
quickly and safely and orderly.
With the drawdowns from two wars, now is the perfect opportunity to
reevaluate our runaway defense spending and make sure that our defense
budget reflects our overall national security strategy. Many outside
experts from across the political spectrum have concluded that the
Pentagon can afford much more substantial cuts than what's found in
this bill. Secondly, while this bill contains some audit provisions,
these measures are only set to take hold in 2017. The Pentagon needs to
be audited. It should have been audited and should be audited right
now--last year, this year, next year. We can't wait until 2017.
Earlier this year, I offered an amendment that would have cut any
Federal agency's budget by 5 percent if they are unable to provide
audit-ready financial documents. We need to get some sunlight on the
Pentagon's books to create a culture of responsibility and
accountability at the Defense Department.
On Afghanistan, the bill has some notable positive steps, but
nonetheless fails to call for a swift and safe withdrawal of our
troops. On the positive side, I applaud the conferees for including
provisions to ensure that security for Afghan women and girls is a
priority during the transition to Afghan security responsibility.
{time} 1320
However, on balance, this bill does not go far enough.
We all know there is no military solution in Afghanistan, and it's
time to bring home our brave men and women in uniform and transition to
full Afghan control. After 10 years and $600 billion invested in an
unstable country, it's past time to end this war--not in 2014, but
right now.
Finally, I'm very concerned about how this bill undermines the
bedrock values of America, and I'm talking about the constitutional
guarantees of due process. I was disappointed to see Senator
Feinstein's provision prohibiting indefinite detention removed during
the conference. We should not allow those who seek to terrorize the
American people to win by trashing the very civil liberties at the
heart of our national identity.
So I urge a ``no'' vote on the rule and a ``no'' vote on final
passage.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, how much time do I have remaining?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Massachusetts has 5\1/2\
minutes remaining.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, this is a moment of opportunity for us to
get serious about dealing with our budget deficit by eliminating the
bloat and the waste in the Pentagon's budget.
What we have before us has some very good provisions in it, but it
also has some very bad provisions in it. The gentlelady from California
mentioned the language on Guantanamo, which is unfortunate. But this
bill also reflects more money--more money--than the Pentagon even
wants, more money than the Joint Chiefs of Staff wants. So we're
throwing more money into this Pentagon budget even though they haven't
asked for it and they don't want it.
At the same time, my friends on the other side of the aisle are
proposing measures--which are going to be taken up in the next rule--to
decimate the social safety net in this country, to make it more
difficult for middle-income families, to make it more difficult to send
your kids to school, to make it more difficult to get affordable
housing, or to get access to food and nutrition if you are in desperate
times.
So it just doesn't make any sense to me. I mean, the idea that we're
giving more money to the Pentagon than they want, but at the same time
we're taking away from our people right here at home.
National security has to mean the quality of life and the standard of
living for the people of the United States of America. It has to mean
things like jobs and financial security for our families.
I regret very much that my friends on the other side of the aisle
seem to not care about what happens to people here in this country
because their budgets and their tax bills go directly after middle-
income families and constitute an all-out war on the poor.
There was an article in The Washington Post on December 19: ``John
Boehner's Plan B Would Raise Taxes on the Poor.'' Really? I mean, is
that how you're going to balance the budget, by sticking it to people
who already are in vulnerable times? This is wrong.
My friends talk about the debt and the deficit, but what they don't
talk about is that we have fought two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and
we haven't paid for it, all on our credit card. We send our young men
and women into harm's way, and we ask them and their families to
sacrifice, and we do nothing. We just put the bill on our credit card.
A few months ago, the chairman of the Budget Committee, Mr. Ryan,
said it's about $1.3 trillion--I think he's lowballing it--but $1.3
trillion on our debt, and nobody over there says a word. They all go
after programs like Social Security and Medicare and food stamps.
So, Mr. Speaker, I ask that we defeat the previous question. If we
defeat the previous question, I will offer an amendment to this rule to
make in order an amendment that will allow the House to have a chance
to vote on a bill passed by the Senate to extend middle class tax cuts,
which has been introduced in the House as H.R. 15. Also, the amendment
would prevent this House from adjourning until we have averted the
fiscal cliff and the President has signed legislation to prevent tax
increases on the middle class.
There is a rumor out there that my friends on the other side of the
aisle are going to try to pass Plan B and C and run out of town and
just leave for vacation. I want to get home for Christmas as much as
anyone else, but the bottom line is that we are facing a crisis--an
artificial crisis that my friends helped create, but we need to avert
it.
Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent to insert the text of the
amendment into the Record, along with extraneous material, immediately
prior to the vote on the previous question.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Massachusetts?
There was no objection.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' and
defeat
[[Page H7373]]
the previous question. I urge a ``no'' vote on the rule.
I would again remind my colleagues that national security and
national defense also has to mean the quality of life for people here
in the United States.
With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the remainder of my
time.
There are several things I wish to address that have been brought up
in the last speech. The first one is, I was just informed that by all
means we probably will be here tomorrow and voting, which really hurts
my feelings. In one respect, I don't have an upgrade on tomorrow's
flight, so maybe it's a good thing that we will be, but there are other
times that we will be dealing with these issues.
People have talked about the amount of money that's going here. I
hope Members of the House realize that 50 percent of all the cuts that
have been made by this administration have been made on the backs of
the military, even though the military defense represents less than 20
percent of the Federal budget. Military has, over the past years, been
cut and cut and cut again.
This increase over what the President's budget request was is only
0.3 percent higher than the President's budget, and it is less than
last year's authorization. I say that only as a fact, not something I
think is good because I think we need to be spending more on what these
people have to do.
To say that the people in uniform don't want or don't need the
programs that are in here is unfair to them. They have to say a
specific line in the positions they are in. But the idea that you
wouldn't take the cruisers that are going to be expended in here and
continue to keep those even though they were scheduled to be mothballed
decades before their life span is over, or that you are using these
funds to restructure the force structure of the Air Force, which is
critical to this country so that we maintain the air superiority we
have had since the Korean conflict, that is a ridiculous concept.
This bill is about people. The gentleman from Massachusetts has an
air base, Hanscom, in his State--probably not in his district, but his
State. I have air complexes. I have people who are working on these
issues. We have not modernized our equipment, which means we have to
have people working on our air complexes to try to take our antiquated
equipment and restore it so it can be useful, so that those who are put
in harm's way defending this country at least have the vehicles and the
resources available to defend themselves and present the possible
outcome. These are the people that are going to be helped. These are
the jobs that are going to be helped by the passage of this particular
bill. These are the people who get TRICARE, which was given to them
either as a bonus to sign or given to them in lieu of salary increases.
And it is unfair for the President to say they should have an increase
in their copay.
These people who are working at these bases, they're not making
$50,000 a year in a pension--they'd be lucky if they make that much
money as part of their salary. Those are the people that we need to
look after. It is the people who make sure that we have a military that
functions, not just those on the front line, not just those in uniform,
but also those who provide their services and provide the material that
they need to maintain this stuff. This bill moves that forward.
I hope that we do not have as a body a myopic approach to the need
for the securing of this country, and we understand how significant
this is. This is one of the few responsibilities Congress has to do
this year and every year.
I want to just say one thing about the potential previous question.
It's not an issue of when we get a chance to vote on it. We have voted
on the previous question that the Democrats would like to put in place
of this. On August 1, we did have a vote, the Levin of Michigan
amendment. It was defeated in this House in a bipartisan manner, with
19 Democrats voting ``no'' on the amendment. Another vote on this at
this time is a redundancy; it's been done. Now let us move on to do
what this bill is supposed to do, the conference report that solves the
problems and puts us moving forward in our defense authorization so
that we actually do come up with the programs we need, not just for
today but also for the future. It's a good conference report. It's a
good underlying bill. We need to move forward.
In closing, Mr. Speaker, I would urge Members to support this rule,
which is--I misspoke earlier, it is a standard rule for all conference
reports. I urge them to support the underlying provisions of this
conference report and of our bill because it is essential for our
Nation's defense. It is our core constitutional responsibility, and we
should not in any way, shape, or form shirk that.
The material previously referred to by Mr. McGovern is as follows:
An Amendment to H. Res. 840 Offered by Mr. McGovern of Massachusetts
At the end of the resolution, add the following new
sections:
Sec. 2. When the House considers the Senate amendment to
H.J. Res. 66, it shall be in order to consider a substitute
amendment consisting of the text of H.R. 15, if offered by
Representative Levin or his designee.
Sec. 3. It shall not be in order to consider a concurrent
resolution providing for adjournment or adjournment sine die
unless the House has been notified that the President has
signed legislation to prevent a tax increase on the middle
class, and to avert the so-called ``fiscal cliff.''
____
(The information contained herein was provided by the
Republican Minority on multiple occasions throughout the
110th and 111th Congresses.)
The Vote on the Previous Question: What It Really Means
This vote, the vote on whether to order the previous
question on a special rule, is not merely a procedural vote.
A vote against ordering the previous question is a vote
against the Republican majority agenda and a vote to allow
the opposition, at least for the moment, to offer an
alternative plan. It is a vote about what the House should be
debating.
Mr. Clarence Cannon's Precedents of the House of
Representatives (VI, 308-311), describes the vote on the
previous question on the rule as ``a motion to direct or
control the consideration of the subject before the House
being made by the Member in charge.'' To defeat the previous
question is to give the opposition a chance to decide the
subject before the House. Cannon cites the Speaker's ruling
of January 13, 1920, to the effect that ``the refusal of the
House to sustain the demand for the previous question passes
the control of the resolution to the opposition'' in order to
offer an amendment. On March 15, 1909, a member of the
majority party offered a rule resolution. The House defeated
the previous question and a member of the opposition rose to
a parliamentary inquiry, asking who was entitled to
recognition. Speaker Joseph G. Cannon (R-Illinois) said:
``The previous question having been refused, the gentleman
from New York, Mr. Fitzgerald, who had asked the gentleman to
yield to him for an amendment, is entitled to the first
recognition.''
Because the vote today may look bad for the Republican
majority they will say ``the vote on the previous question is
simply a vote on whether to proceed to an immediate vote on
adopting the resolution . . . [and] has no substantive
legislative or policy implications whatsoever.'' But that is
not what they have always said. Listen to the Republican
Leadership Manual on the Legislative Process in the United
States House of Representatives, (6th edition, page 135).
Here's how the Republicans describe the previous question
vote in their own manual: ``Although it is generally not
possible to amend the rule because the majority Member
controlling the time will not yield for the purpose of
offering an amendment, the same result may be achieved by
voting down the previous question on the rule. . . . When the
motion for the previous question is defeated, control of the
time passes to the Member who led the opposition to ordering
the previous question. That Member, because he then controls
the time, may offer an amendment to the rule, or yield for
the purpose of amendment.''
In Deschler's Procedure in the U.S. House of
Representatives, the subchapter titled ``Amending Special
Rules'' states: ``a refusal to order the previous question on
such a rule [a special rule reported from the Committee on
Rules] opens the resolution to amendment and further
debate.'' (Chapter 21, section 21.2) Section 21.3 continues:
``Upon rejection of the motion for the previous question on a
resolution reported from the Committee on Rules, control
shifts to the Member leading the opposition to the previous
question, who may offer a proper amendment or motion and who
controls the time for debate thereon.''
Clearly, the vote on the previous question on a rule does
have substantive policy implications. It is one of the only
available tools for those who oppose the Republican
majority's agenda and allows those with alternative views the
opportunity to offer an alternative plan.
Mr. BISHOP of Utah. With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance
of my time and move the previous question on the resolution.
[[Page H7374]]
{time} 1330
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on ordering the previous
question on the resolution.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the ayes appeared to have it.
Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, further
proceedings on this question will be postponed.
____________________