[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 127 (Tuesday, September 24, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6698-S6699]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Continuing Resolution
Mr. President, I have another important matter to address.
I remember the Bill Murray movie ``Groundhog Day''--a wonderful
movie, farcical but nowhere near as farcical as the groundhog day we
have once again in Congress. We find ourselves in a funding crisis
manufactured by a small, partisan faction. They say they are doing this
for the good of the country as they watch people's pension funds and
their savings for the kids' college--not to mention everything else--go
south because of the concern the markets and investors have as they
wait to see if Congress can get its act together and actually do what
we were elected to do.
This small group of ideologues continue to turn their backs to
reality. They insist on their ``my way or the highway'' ultimatums to
the rest of the country, which is preventing a bipartisan solution on
the funding bill and is leading us to the brink of a government
shutdown.
I love my grandchildren. They range in age from 5 to 15 years old. I
have watched them grow up. I saw them on the playground when they were
1, 2, 3, and 4 years old. Sometimes they would have little squabbles,
but they would work it out. This is a playground that would be a
terrible example to children in a schoolyard. This crisis is again
artificial and manufactured for political posturing. Even its effects
on the American people as we all again must anticipate a shutdown--are
as real as they are avoidable. The American public is rightly weary and
wary of this brinkmanship and of one Made in Congress, manufactured
crisis after crisis. This artificially induced uncertainty is harmful
as well to our American economy, which is still tentatively regaining
its footing after the great recession.
Some could come and posture--in this body or the other body--about
how they will shut down the government if they don't have their way
because they have this figured out better than everybody else.
They will get their 2 or 3 minutes on television, and they will be
very happy that they did. The American people who will see their
businesses close, their stocks go down, their savings dry up, and their
jobs closed off just so someone can get on television, are not thrilled
about this, especially when it is all totally unnecessary.
The issue that is preventing even a temporary spending bill from
making it to the President's desk is the Affordable Care Act.
Unfortunately, ever since its enactment, many Republicans in Congress
have been determined to derail the law and prevent its implementation.
They don't come up with a better idea. They say it is all or nothing.
They don't come and say: What are we going to do to help pay for your
kids' insurance while they are in college? What are we going to do to
help your family if they have a preexisting condition. No, no, no. We
are just going to say no to everything.
Instead of doing the people's business, such as enacting routine
budget measures before the end of the fiscal year, the House has voted
more than 40 times this year alone to defund this landmark law, the
Affordable Care Act. They have no interest in fixing problems or making
it better--only in blowing it up. Even though the President has
promised to veto a bill that includes this provision and the Senate has
voted down similar measures in the past, the law's opponents perceive
this short-term spending bill as an opportunity to hold the rest of
America and all government activities hostage to their ideological
demands.
They have not come up with one single idea of how they might make it
better. They have not come up with anything. They haven't proposed an
idea and said: Here is our idea that could be better. No, just get rid
of it all.
Actually, I would remind them that was the position of their
candidate for President 1 year ago. He said if he were elected
President, he would do away with it. What did the American people say?
I recall how that election came out.
Let's think about what defunding and repealing the Affordable Care
Act would really mean: Our country would return to a time when
insurance companies could deny coverage because of a preexisting health
condition. Benefits would be stripped for those who get sick. And
seniors would pay more for prescription drugs. Tens of millions
Americans are currently without health insurance, but the health
insurance marketplaces opening next month will provide access for these
Americans to obtain coverage. And while we often hear that this is a
``job-killing'' bill that is adding trillions of dollars to our
deficit, that rhetoric could not be farther from the truth. Repealing
the Affordable Care Act would actually add to our deficit, because the
reforms we put in place more than three years ago are designed to save
health care costs in the long run.
Beyond that damage, the House continuing resolution also would
drastically affect current Medicare beneficiaries. The House bill would
eliminate free wellness visits, which this year alone have helped 16.5
million seniors gain access to quality preventative care. The House's
short-sighted CR would also stop Medicare prescription drug coverage
and discounts known as the ``donut hole'' forcing seniors to pay more
out-of-pocket for their prescription drugs. And sadly, seniors are not
the only ones who would be harmed by this cynical House legislation.
Community Health Centers, which provide necessary care to our rural
communities across the Nation and especially in Vermont, would be hit
with a 60 percent reduction in Federal funding. Lifesaving nurse
visitation programs to help low-income mothers carry healthy babies to
term would be eliminated, and more than 92,000 individuals who
currently have coverage under the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan
Program would be dropped. The list goes on.
The ill-conceived, short-term spending bill passed by the House last
week is not the only bill approved by the other body that would deal
firm blows to the most vulnerable in the country. After refusing to
bring a farm bill to the House floor that would garner enough
bipartisan votes to pass--as the chair of our committee, Senator
Stabenow, did in the Senate, where we had
[[Page S6699]]
a bipartisan bill--House leaders took the unprecedented step earlier
this year and split food assistance from the other essential programs
supported by the farm bill, even though we passed a farm bill that
would save $25 to $30 billion.
After months of delay, last week the House voted on a separate
nutrition title, which only moves us further away from enacting a farm
bill before the programs expire on September 30. This latest lurching
maneuver means even more uncertainty for farmers.
Instead of standing with the millions of Americans who are still
struggling to put food on the table--these House Members never have to
go hungry, except by choice, because of the huge salaries they make--it
is regrettable and inexcusable that the House Republicans are turning
to slashing essential nutrition help for struggling Americans. Ensuring
that these programs can continue to serve Vermonters and all Americans
in need is a key part of enacting a strong farm bill for our country.
It is a reality recognized by the bipartisan Senate-passed farm bill.
The House cuts SNAP benefits by levels 10 times as high as the
bipartisan Senate bill and twice as high as the House's original bill.
These cuts would mean that each year an average of 3 million people
would be kicked off food assistance, even those who are working and
making as little as $2,500 per year. What is worse, the bill will mean
hundreds of thousands of children will lose access to school meals. Ask
any teacher, whether in Hawaii, Vermont or in any other State, does a
hungry child learn? Of course not.
These school meals are an investment in our future and an investment
in our children. Having young people who are able to learn is an
investment in the future of the U.S. economy. So what do we say? Oh,
no, we are not going to feed them. This is a country that spends
billions of dollars just to get rid of excess food and on needless diet
programs, but we cannot feed children in school. It is shameful. It is
mean-spirited, shortsighted, and it hurts America.
If that were not enough, the House Republicans also assert with their
bill that 3 months of benefits every 3 years is plenty of time for out-
of-work Americans to find a job that pays well enough to feed a family.
Get real. Have they seen what happened to the economy in this country?
Have they seen what happened as we try to drag ourselves back from the
horrible recession they put us into a few years ago? Unfortunately,
when there is only one job for every three unemployed workers. Simply
telling out-of-work Americans to get a job is easier said than done.
Somebody ought to ask them why don't they do their jobs.
Times of high unemployment are the very reason we have food
assistance. These food programs were always carried by Republicans and
Democrats who worked together to help Americans get back on their feet.
Despite the heated rhetoric, our Food Stamp Program is working as
intended.
I was fortunate to come here when we had two men with entirely
different philosophies. Both men became nominees of their party to run
for President, George McGovern and Bob Dole. They worked together to
feed the hungry people in this country, especially in the School Lunch
Program.
The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that the SNAP costs will
fall over the next several years. As the economy improves and people
get back to work, those costs will come down. Children who are educated
will create jobs.
Instead, we have bumper sticker politics--appealing to our worst
instincts. It is churlish, childish, and irresponsible. I might also
say it is immoral.
The House-passed CR and the House so-called farm bill will only
worsen the gridlock that crippled the Senate since our return from the
August recess. We are elected not to grandstand but to legislate. Let's
legislate around here. Members need to stop running to the cameras,
getting little sound bites and saying things such as: I am standing up
for America, as they do everything to kill the American economy.
We were not elected to make the government less efficient. We are
even unable to make the most basic decisions that the American people
elected us to make. The American people want us to solve the problems
now through fair solutions and through the give-and-take of our elected
government.
I appreciate the fact that the people of my State--Republicans and
Democrats together--give me the honor of serving here. I have become
the longest serving Senator from our State and also the longest serving
Senator in this body. I have seen Republicans and Democrats work
together on these problems. I have seen people in the past do that. I
know it can be done but not when a tiny minority says: We are the only
ones who know what to do, and we will make the decision. No. We have
good men and women from both parties in the House and Senate. Let's
stop the bumper sticker politics. Let's get back to work and do things
the way they should be done. There is still time to show the American
people that we know why we were sent here and that Congress can still
do the work of the Nation.
Mr. President, I yield back all time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The question is on the Hughes nomination.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The question is, Will the Senate advise and consent to the nomination
of Todd M. Hughes, of the District of Columbia, to be United States
Circuit Judge for the Federal Circuit?
The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Hampshire (Mrs.
Shaheen) and the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Udall) are necessarily
absent.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Heitkamp). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 98, nays 0, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 204 Ex.]
YEAS--98
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Barrasso
Baucus
Begich
Bennet
Blumenthal
Blunt
Boozman
Boxer
Brown
Burr
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Chambliss
Chiesa
Coats
Coburn
Cochran
Collins
Coons
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
Cruz
Donnelly
Durbin
Enzi
Feinstein
Fischer
Flake
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Grassley
Hagan
Harkin
Hatch
Heinrich
Heitkamp
Heller
Hirono
Hoeven
Inhofe
Isakson
Johanns
Johnson (SD)
Johnson (WI)
Kaine
King
Kirk
Klobuchar
Landrieu
Leahy
Lee
Levin
Manchin
Markey
McCain
McCaskill
McConnell
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Moran
Murkowski
Murphy
Murray
Nelson
Paul
Portman
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Risch
Roberts
Rockefeller
Rubio
Sanders
Schatz
Schumer
Scott
Sessions
Shelby
Stabenow
Tester
Thune
Toomey
Udall (NM)
Vitter
Warner
Warren
Whitehouse
Wicker
Wyden
NOT VOTING--2
Shaheen
Udall (CO)
The nomination was confirmed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the motion to
reconsider is considered made and laid on the table, and the President
will immediately be notified of the Senate's action.
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