[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 134 (Wednesday, October 2, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6112]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Woodall) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, I have a heavy heart about this issue, as I
know many of my colleagues do. In fact, I haven't bumped into one of
the 432 of us who is enthusiastic about the situation that we are in.
I will tell you, Mr. Speaker, one of the things that is most
troubling to me is the decision to define success as passing a CR that
the Senate is dictating. I don't say that because it is the Senate. My
constituency back home doesn't care about CRs. A CR is a continuing
resolution, as you know, Mr. Speaker.
The only time--the only time--a continuing resolution comes to the
floor of this House is when the House has already failed to do the job
it was supposed to do. That is passing appropriations bills, Mr.
Speaker. That is appropriating through 12 different bills, one step at
a time, making those decisions about spending priorities for the
Nation.
It is fascinating to me, Mr. Speaker, because it has been years--
years--since this House has gone through that process not through any
fault of this House, but because we have absolutely no activity on the
Senate side. Again, it somehow is getting defined today as if you do
things ``piecemeal'' that you are somehow doing something wrong. Again,
that is regular order. Doing things one bill at a time is normal. That
is what is supposed to happen. You are supposed to make individual
decisions on individual bills.
Last year, the House passed seven different appropriations bills, Mr.
Speaker, one step at a time the way the government is supposed to be
funded. The Senate passed one and, thus, the process broke down. No
appropriations bills were passed. We have been funding the government
through these continuing resolutions. Well, here we are again: this
year, Mr. Speaker, the House has worked on five appropriations bills;
the Senate has passed zero--zero.
So we are here where we are today because the Senate hasn't been able
to move anything at all. It is with a heavy heart that I hear my
colleagues say we could reopen services for veterans, but we are not
going to do it because we have a better plan that we ought to do
everything at once. If we can't help everybody, we don't want to help
anybody.
I don't believe that is actually the sentiment of my friends on the
other side of the aisle. In fact, Mr. Speaker, in June of this year, we
came together--we came together--in this House, only four votes against
a Veterans Affairs appropriations bill. Four votes in this entire House
of Representatives voted ``no.'' Everyone else voted ``yes.'' That
bill, which fully funds all of our veterans services, in fact, pluses
up the funding for our veterans services not for 3 months, not for 3
weeks, but for the entire fiscal year. We passed that in June, Mr.
Speaker, and it sits in the Senate dusty today having received no
attention since June.
I don't know about your constituents, Mr. Speaker, but my
constituents want us to get something done. They understand there are
things that we disagree about, but isn't there more that unites us than
divides us? I tell you that there is. I am absolutely certain that
there is. If the only way we can find it is to move one small piece of
legislation at a time, that may not be the most efficient way to do it,
but if that gets the job done, let's get the job done.
Mr. Speaker, I am tired of excuses and I am tired of the blame. The
Rules Committee is going to report out a rule today that is going to
bring these provisions back to the House for an opportunity to open up
those parks that my colleague was talking about just a few minutes ago,
an opportunity to serve our veterans, an opportunity to deal with the
important research at NIH, and on and on.
Let's find those things we agree on. Let's get something done. We can
do it, Mr. Speaker.
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