[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 135 (Thursday, October 3, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7145-S7146]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST--H.J. RES. 72
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, many of us were stunned this week to
see the administration blocking the World War II Memorial. It was a
reminder to all of us how much we owe the ``greatest generation.'' Last
week the Senate unanimously agreed to ensure our troops are paid during
the shutdown, and the President correctly signed it into law
immediately.
Today the House will pass a bill to ensure our veterans--in fact,
they have done that--continue to get the services and benefits they so
richly deserve. If Democrats are unwilling to fund other parts of the
government, at the very least they can agree to support our veterans.
As the Senator from Texas and the majority leader were just
discussing, I have the first of these unanimous consent requests to
propound.
I ask unanimous consent that when the Senate receives H.J. Res. 72,
making continuing appropriations for veterans' benefits for fiscal year
2014, the measure be read three times and passed, and the motion to
reconsider be made and laid upon the table.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there objection?
Mr. REID. Reserving the right to object, Mr. President, my friend
notes that no one wants to shut down the government. Obviously, he
didn't listen to my statement. We have people who have been saying for
days now--Republicans saying--they are glad the government has shut
down; they have been waiting for this for years. I have quoted the
Congresswoman from Minnesota who said that. Congressman Marlin Stutzman
of Indiana tells us where the tea party is when he said: ``We're not
going to be disrespected. We have to get something out of this. And I
don't know what that even is.''
So Republicans are throwing one crazy idea or another at the wall in
the hope one will stick. They throw out one idea, then come up with
another one. And then, I repeat, they hope something will stick on that
wall, and they do not even know which wall they are throwing it on.
The latest plan came from the junior Senator from Texas, which is to
cherry-pick parts of the government he likes. House Republican Leader
Cantor admitted this strategy. According to the New York Times, this is
what he said when asked: What about those cancer patients who need some
help; what about the disadvantaged kids who want to return to their
Head Start classes?
That's coming as well. We are going to take every issue
that has come up and put it on the floor.
He is following Senator Cruz's idea specifically. Senator Cruz is now
joint Speaker. He lectures the House on occasion, as he does people
over here.
We support veterans and parks and NIH and all these different
elements of government that are closed, but we also are not going to
choose between veterans, cancer research, disease control, highway
safety, or the FBI, and we are not going to give a blank check
[[Page S7146]]
to the junior Senator from Texas to pick his favorite parts of the
government on a daily basis. Today it is parks, tomorrow it is NIH,
maybe later it will be something else.
Mr. SCHUMER. Would the leader yield for a question?
Mr. REID. I am happy to yield.
Mr. SCHUMER. I simply wanted to follow up on what he said.
If we were to go along with these individual UC requests----
Mr. CORNYN. Regular order, Mr. President.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there objection to the request?
Mr. REID. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, here is the
situation. The junior Senator from Texas wants to fund everything else,
just not ObamaCare. Here is what one columnist said today--Dana Milbank
from the Washington Post--and I will be quick; I know Senators have a
lot to talk about here:
House Republicans continued what might be called the
lifeboat strategy: deciding which government functions are
worth saving. In: veterans, the troops and tourist
attractions. Out: Poor children, pregnant women, and just
about every government function that regulates business or
requires people to pay taxes. Here are some of the functions
not boarding--
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, is that an objection?
Mr. REID. I will use leader time then, Mr. President.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. REID. So if they are afraid to listen to the things I have to
say, they should listen, because the government is closed, and it is
closed because they have helped close it. So let's not try to be
technical here. I want to say something and I am going to say it.
Continuing the Milbank quote:
Here are some of the functions not boarding the GOP
lifeboats: market regulation, chemical spill investigations,
antitrust enforcement, work site immigration checks,
workplace safety inspections, the Environmental Protection
Agency . . . communications and trade regulation, nutrition
for 9 million children and pregnant women, flu monitoring and
other functions of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and housing rental assistance for the poor.
Here is what else he wrote:
And that's quite a list that the Tea Party is throwing out
of the boat. We need to end the Government shutdown.
I say, without any reservation, that the key to opening the
government still remains with the Senate-passed funding resolution that
will open the government. We will talk about anything they want to talk
about. We have said that.
I ask unanimous consent that their request be modified as follows:
That an amendment, which is at the desk, be agreed to; that the joint
resolution, as amended, be read a third time and passed and the motion
to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table with no
intervening action or debate.
This amendment is the text that passed the Senate and is the clean
continuing resolution for the entire government. It is something that
is already over in the House and reportedly has the support of the
majority of the Members of the House of Representatives, including at
least 20 Republicans, and some report as many as 100.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there objection to the modified
request?
Mr. McCONNELL. I object.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Objection is heard.
Mr. REID. I object to the previous consent.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Objection is heard.
The Republican leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, with all due respect to my good friend
the majority leader, he was speaking about the junior Senator from
Texas, whom I don't see on the floor at the moment. The request was
made by the minority leader, the Republican leader of the Senate, and
it dealt, quite appropriately, with veterans' benefits. That was the
whole purpose of the consent request.
I would repeat that I was the one who requested consent that we
provide relief for veterans during this shutdown, and the person to
whom his speech seems to be directed I don't see on the floor at the
moment. But with that, I know we are in the middle of a colloquy here,
and the Republican whip has the podium now.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Republican whip.
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