[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 133 (Tuesday, October 1, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6062-H6063]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, quite a day--first day of the government
shutdown.
Americans come to Washington to see the Lincoln Memorial, visit the
Smithsonian, go to the National Zoo. They go to New York to see the
Statue of Liberty--``give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses
yearning for freedom.'' Go to national parks--the treasures of our
country--closed. Services tapered down. No new patients at the National
Institutes of Health. This should not be in America. Government
shutdowns are wrong, and they're bad for our country.
Now, let's think a little bit about how we got here. We got here
because the job of the Congress, according to the Constitution, is to
come up with a budget and appropriate monies. The Republicans have had
a budget, and the Democrats in the House have asked month after month
after month after month to have a conference committee appointed so
that we could work with the Senate and come up with a budget. And the
Republicans--even though we had bills, letters, requests--no
conference, no, no, no, no, no.
Now, beyond the last minute, beyond midnight last night, when all of
their failed attempts to get the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act--and that's what it is, it's an affordable care act and a patient
protection act--abolished; passed 3 years ago; 43rd attempt. Reality:
it's not going to happen. It's the law of the land. And one day it will
be seen, like Social Security and Medicare, as one of the three
greatest laws ever passed by this Congress.
But they've tried everything they can to stop it: defund it, put it
off a year, come up with different prevarications. At the last minute
after midnight they say: We want a conference committee. They can get a
conference committee if they come with a clean continuing resolution.
And what's in their continuing resolution? A budget of $986 billion.
The Ryan figures were less. That's what they wanted. It's not what the
Democrats wanted. The Democrats want a higher budget. This cuts 17
percent from Health and Human Services, programs the government offers
to people in need, the safety net, people who more than ever need SNAP
payments, need Meals on Wheels, need assistance. We accepted their
lower figure for a continuing resolution. Even then it wasn't enough.
They put it in all these proposals and abolished the health care bill.
You know, when the Republicans came to power about 3\1/2\ years ago,
one of the things they told the American people: We're going to be
different. We're not going to have bills that combine different
subjects. You know all you people don't like that, these bills with
different subjects that come back from the Senate or pass the House
with amendments. We're not going to do that. Then they come with bills
that are the budget, a continuing resolution, along with abolishing
ObamaCare. That's against what they said they would do.
They said they were concerned about the debt, and they have offsets--
no bill could pass without an offset; nothing could contribute to the
deficit. Yet they brought a bill, a continuing resolution, but
abolishing the medical device tax, costing the government $30 billion.
No offset.
In the history on ObamaCare, they have been cited by PolitiFact twice
for having the governmental ``Lie of the Year.'' One is they said there
were death panels, panels that simply said that end-of-life discussions
could be covered by government payments, a proposal that Republicans
put forward--I believe with Senator Grassley and a gentleman from
Louisiana.
They also said it was a government takeover of health care. It's not
a government takeover; it's insurance. It's the plan Mitt Romney put
into effect, Bob Dole championed, Richard Nixon championed. It's a
Republican plan. Most Democrats would have preferred a single payer,
certainly a public option. They're not satisfied with that.
Now they're talking about a special deal that Congress people get.
Shame on them. I, for one, don't take Federal insurance. I have a
different program. But for the people in Congress and their staffers,
because of an amendment Senator Grassley put in the bill, they go into
the exchanges and they leave their Federal health care plan they've
been in. It was subsidized, like employers subsidize health care. Now
it is no longer. It's unfortunate.
My time has run out. The government has run out.
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