[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 138 (Monday, October 7, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7245-S7246]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, yesterday the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, John Boehner, on national TV claimed there are not
enough votes to pass the bill and bring an end to the dangerous
government shutdown. I believe he is mistaken.
Two hundred Democratic Members of the House of Representatives said
they would vote for the bill to reopen the government, and 22
Republicans in the House have said publicly they would vote for the
bill. We have heard there are as many as 100 who wish to vote for it.
No matter how we do the math, it adds up to a majority of the Members
of the House of Representatives.
If there were only a mechanism for polling all Members of the House
of Representatives to find out whether they support the Senate-passed
bill, one surefire way to find out whether the bill would pass is to
have a vote on it; that is, to vote on the legislation that has already
been passed in the Senate.
There is a way; have a vote. That would settle the question for a
long, long, time, wouldn't it.
What I say to the Speaker: Allow a vote on the resolution that would
end the shutdown, legislation that you, John Boehner, proposed in the
first place. The entire Federal Government could reopen for business by
tomorrow morning.
I ask the Speaker, why are you afraid? Are you afraid this measure
will pass, the government will reopen and America will realize you took
the country hostage for no apparent reason?
Why is the Speaker opposed to these reasonable solutions.
Across the Nation people are suffering--not only Federal employees--
because of his irresponsible action, the irresponsible tea party driven
action. But it is not, I say, only Federal employees. US Air had a
delivery last Friday of a $180 million aircraft. They couldn't take
delivery. Why? Because there weren't inspectors to do that for those
aircraft.
We know that Lockheed has already announced today they are laying off
3,000 people, and there is more to come in the defense industry. It is
happening all through the government.
There is an easy way out of this; the same escape hatch has been
available as long as we have been a country. It is called a vote. But
for the 7 days the Federal Government has been closed for business, the
Speaker has refused to use that escape hatch.
It is so important when people wish to buy a home. One can't buy a
home with an FHA loan today. Even if it is not FHA, they can't get them
done because to confirm the amount of money that is on the application
they need an IRS person to check it. They are not available.
The Senate-passed bill to reopen the government, while we work out
our
[[Page S7246]]
budget differences, wasn't my idea. It was his idea. The Speaker of the
House of Representatives said: You do this CR at this number, and I
will get it done.
We negotiated for a while. I agreed to his number. It was very hard
to do for us in the Democratic Caucus. But it was his idea, not my
idea. All this talk about not negotiating, that is what that was all
about. He admits it was his intention all along to pass a clean
resolution. But then he ran into the tea party, a minority within a
majority that runs the majority in the House of Representatives.
The bill before the House of Representatives is a compromise by us, a
compromise that was difficult, I repeat, to get my caucus to accept.
Now that we have compromised, the Speaker won't take yes for an answer.
He has moved the goal line again.
Last week he said he wanted to go to conference to work out some
differences. As we heard on national TV yesterday, he is not only
concerned about ObamaCare, he is concerned about the budget deficit, as
we all are. He keeps changing. He said he wanted to talk about that.
Fine. We are happy to do that. If he wants to talk about ObamaCare, if
he wants to talk about anything else, we will do it. I put that in
writing and had it hand delivered to him. We said that we would talk
about agriculture, we would talk about health care, we would talk about
domestic discretionary spending, military spending, and anything he
wishes to talk about. We have been asking to go to conference on a
responsible budget for more than 6 months.
On national TV, the Speaker said Chairman Ryan and Chairman Murray
have been working together for a long time. As I have indicated here
previously, he said that in a meeting we had in the White House in the
last few days. I said in front of everybody there: It is simply not
factual.
Senator Murray issued a statement yesterday after she heard him
saying this on national TV saying that is not true. They have had a
couple of meetings but they haven't discussed anything substantive. I
guess the meetings were only to say to the Speaker they met, but they
talked about nothing in her budget or his budget.
We are saying simply, reopen the government. We have said we will go
to your budget number. We don't like it. We have said we will go to
conference and talk about anything you want.
He can't take yes for an answer.
Simply reopen the government. We will talk, I repeat, about anything
you wish to talk about. We are not afraid to negotiate. We are not
afraid to make reasonable compromises. Once again the football was
moved, just like Lucy in the ``Peanuts'' cartoon.
As Judd Legum, editor-in-chief of ThinkProgress pointed out,
Republicans have a strange definition of compromise. This is how he
explains it:
Republicans ask: ``Can I burn down your house?'' We say: ``No.''
Republicans ask: ``Just the second floor?'' We say: ``No.'' Republicans
ask: ``[Just the] garage?'' We say: ``No.'' Republicans say: ``Let's
talk about what I can burn down.'' We say: ``No.'' Then Republicans
say: ``You're not compromising!''
Republicans insist we must negotiate while the Federal Government
remains closed. As The New York Times editorial reported on Saturday,
when 800,000 Federal employees are furloughed, government services are
shut down and the economy is flagging, it is hardly time for talking.
Then they come up with all this: We will do an NIH bill. We will open
NIH.
The problem is, it is really hard to pick and choose between that and
the Park Service, especially when we consider they have cut spending
this year for NIH by $1.6 billion; the second year of their famous
sequestration, $2 billion. This is all a charade.
This is what the Times wrote after the brief introduction:
This is a moment for immediate action to reopen the
government's doors, not the beginning of a conversation
Republicans spurned when they lacked the leverage of a
shutdown.
[Republicans] have refused to negotiate over the Senate's
budget, they have refused to negotiate over the President's
budget, and they have refused to negotiate to make the health
law more efficient. . . . The two sides will eventually have
to reach a reckoning on long-term economic issues, but the
time to do so is not while dangling over an abyss.
Democrats are willing to negotiate but won't negotiate with a gun to
our heads. We say to our Republican colleagues: End this irresponsible
government shutdown. Stop your reckless threats of a default on the
Nation's obligations. Then Democrats will negotiate over anything,
anything our Republican colleagues wish to negotiate.
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