[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 134 (Wednesday, October 2, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6112-H6113]
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
Virginia (Mr. Moran) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MORAN. Mr. Speaker, this Republican shutdown is an outrageous
abdication of Congress' responsibility. It didn't need to be this way.
In fact, if the House leadership were to call up a clean continuing
resolution appropriations bill today it would pass. There are a
sufficient number of votes from both sides of the political aisle to
pass the measure. So far, however, the House Republican leadership has
refused to do so, afraid of extremists within its own caucus--the so-
called Ted Cruz Tea Party faction--whose demand is to shut down the
government until the Affordable Care Act is either repealed or delayed.
So the American people's government has shut down. Ninety percent of
the employees of the Environmental Protection Agency have been
furloughed. Eighty-four percent of the employees of the Department of
Interior all over the country, but mostly in the Western States, have
all been furloughed. Seventy percent of the employees of our essential
intelligence agencies have now been furloughed. Recipients of the
Women, Infants, and Children program, the most vulnerable mothers and
children, have had their livelihoods jeopardized. The National
Institutes of Health have had to turn away 30 children with cancer from
clinical trials.
We in this House must end this shutdown. This debate isn't even about
the budget. The President and the Senate have already agreed to
trillions of dollars of cuts set by the so-called Ryan Republican
budget even though this draconian budget will endanger basic government
operations, it will disinvest in our children's future, and it will
trigger even more Federal employee furloughs and possible RIFs.
Rather, this shutdown is about a measure that strengthens insurance
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coverage for the roughly 260 million Americans who have insurance. It
will also eliminate preexisting conditions and lifetime limits and
makes health insurance available and affordable to roughly 40 million
uninsured Americans through State exchanges where insurance companies
compete to provide coverage, and through expansion of the Medicaid
program.
The Affordable Care Act is the law of the land. It has been affirmed
as constitutional by the Republican-dominated Supreme Court and by a 5
million vote majority of the American people with the defeat of the
Presidential candidate who promised to repeal it less than a year ago.
Regardless of where one may stand on the issue of the Affordable Care
Act--aka ObamaCare--our Democratic process for enacting laws and
setting policy should not be held hostage to the threat of a government
shutdown. It sets a terrible precedent for the future.
My Republican colleagues continue to demand concessions with serious
long-term consequences in exchange for funding a spending bill for just
a relatively few more days, another 45 days or so. They want long-term
concessions at their preferred inadequate spending levels.
What unreasonable demands will be made when this latest CR expires in
2 months or 1 month? These attempts to overturn the democratic results
of the last election by threat-making and hostage-taking must end now.
We should do our job, fund the government, and we should remove the
looming threat to the global economy in the form of the expiration of
the debt ceiling, which will occur in just a couple of weeks.
Not content with the economic destruction and hardship brought by
their government shutdown and their refusal to let the Federal
Government play its historic role to stimulate a strong economic
recovery, House Republicans continue to threaten the full faith and
credit of the United States.
As President Obama noted, if the tables were turned and you had a
Republican President and a Democratic Speaker, as you did during the
Reagan administration, neither Speaker O'Neill nor the American people
would tolerate what is going on today.
In fact, that is the situation that we have today--a broken Congress,
a situation where the American people's voices aren't heard or
represented. It is time for us to heed the American people, to let the
majority of this Congress determine public policy.
Let's stop the extremism. Let's be responsible. Let's pass this
continuing resolution clean and go on with the business of the
government.
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