[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 138 (Monday, October 7, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7247-S7260]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, let me start off by acknowledging an
article which appeared in today's New York Times attributed to the
Senate Chaplain, Dr. Barry Black, who led us in prayer to open the
Senate's session. It is entitled ``Give Us This Day, Our Daily Senate
Scolding,'' and it goes on to talk about the prayers which Dr. Black,
our Senate Chaplain, has offered during the course of the last week
during the government shutdown. They say in the article the morning
invocation has turned into a daily conscience check for the 100 men and
women of the Senate.
The article points out that in the course of one of his prayers Dr.
Black said:
Remove from them that stubborn pride which imagines itself
to be above and beyond criticism. Forgive them the blunders
they have committed.
I can't match his baritone voice and delivery when it comes to these
prayers, but I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record this
article as a tribute to our Senate Chaplain who has been given the
awesome responsibility to prove the power of prayer during the midst of
a government shutdown.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the New York Times, Oct. 6, 2013]
Give Us This Day, Our Daily Senate Scolding
(By Jeremy W. Peters)
Washington.--The disapproval comes from angry constituents,
baffled party elders and colleagues on the other side of the
Capitol. But nowhere have senators found criticism more
personal or immediate than right inside their own chamber
every morning when the chaplain delivers the opening prayer.
``Save us from the madness,'' the chaplain, a Seventh-day
Adventist, former Navy rear admiral and collector of brightly
colored bow ties named Barry C. Black, said one day late last
week as he warmed up into what became an epic ministerial
scolding.
``We acknowledge our transgressions, our shortcomings, our
smugness, our selfishness and our pride,'' he went on, his
baritone voice filling the room. ``Deliver us from the
hypocrisy of attempting to sound reasonable while being
unreasonable.''
So it has gone every day for the last week when Mr. Black,
who has been the Senate's official man of the cloth for 10
years, has taken one of the more rote rituals on Capitol
Hill--the morning invocation--and turned it into a daily
conscience check for the 100 men and women of the United
States Senate.
Inside the tempestuous Senate chamber, where debate has
degenerated into daily name-calling--the Tea Party as a band
of nihilists and extortionists, and Democrats as socialists
who want to force their will on the American people--Mr.
Black's words manage to cut through as powerful and
persuasive.
During his prayer on Friday, the day after officers from
the United States Capitol Police shot and killed a woman who
had used her car as a battering ram, Mr. Black noted that the
officers were not being paid because of the government
shutdown.
Then he turned his attention back to the senators. ``Remove
from them that stubborn pride which imagines itself to be
above and beyond criticism,'' he said. ``Forgive them the
blunders they have committed.''
Senator Harry Reid, the pugnacious majority leader who has
called his Republican adversaries anarchists, rumps and
hostage takers, took note. As Mr. Black spoke, Mr. Reid,
whose head was bowed low in prayer, broke his concentration
and looked straight up at the chaplain.
``Following the suggestion in the prayer of Admiral
Black,'' the majority leader said after the invocation,
seeming genuinely contrite, ``I think we've all here in the
Senate kind of lost the aura of Robert Byrd,'' one of the
historical giants of the Senate, who prized gentility and
compromise.
In many ways, Mr. Black, 65, is like any other employee of
the federal government who is fed up with lawmakers'
inability to resolve the political crisis that has kept the
government closed for almost a week. He is not being paid.
His Bible study classes, which he holds for senators and
their staff members four times a week, have been canceled
until further notice.
His is a nonpartisan position, one of just a few in the
Senate, and he prefers to leave his political leanings vague.
He was chosen in 2003 by Senator Bill Frist, a Tennessee
Republican who was the majority leader at the time, from a
group of finalists selected by a bipartisan committee. Before
that he ministered in the Navy for nearly 30 years.
``I use a biblical perspective to decide my beliefs about
various issues,'' Mr. Black said in an interview in his
office suite on the third floor of the Capitol. ``Let's just
say I'm liberal on some and conservative on others. But it's
obvious the Bible condemns some things in a very forceful and
overt way, and I would go along with that condemnation.''
Last year, he participated in the Hoodies on the Hill rally
to draw attention to the shooting death of Trayvon Martin. In
2007, after objections from groups that did not like the idea
of a Senate chaplain appearing alongside political figures,
he canceled a speech he was scheduled to give at an
evangelical event featuring, among others, Tony Perkins of
the conservative Focus on the Family and the columnist and
author Ann Coulter.
Mr. Black, who is the first black Senate chaplain as well
as its first Seventh-day Adventist, grew up in public housing
in Baltimore, an experience he draws on in his sermons and
writings, including a 2006 autobiography, ``From the Hood to
the Hill.''
In his role as chaplain, a position that has existed since
1789, he acts as a sounding board, spiritual adviser and
ethical counselor to members of the Senate. When he prays
each day, he said, he recites the names of all 100 senators
and their spouses, reading them from a laminated index card.
It is not uncommon for him to have 125 people at his Bible
study gatherings or 20 to 30 senators at his weekly prayer
breakfast. He officiates weddings for Senate staff members.
He performs hospital visitations. And he has been at the side
of senators when they have died, most recently Daniel K.
Inouye of Hawaii in December.
He tries to use his proximity to the senators--and the fact
that for at least one minute every morning, his is the only
voice they hear--to break through on issues that he feels are
especially urgent. Lately, he said, they seem to be paying
attention.
``I remember once talking about self-inflicted wounds--that
captured the imagination of some of our lawmakers,'' he said.
``Remember, my prayer is the first thing they hear every day.
I have the opportunity, really, to frame the day in a special
way.''
His words lately may be pointed, but his tone is always
steady and calm.
``May they remember that all that is necessary for
unintended catastrophic consequences is for good people to do
nothing,'' he said the day of the shutdown deadline.
``Unless you empower our lawmakers,'' he prayed another
day, ``they can comprehend their duty but not perform it.''
The House, which has its own chaplain, liked what it heard
from Mr. Black so much that it invited him to give the
invocation on Friday.
``I see us playing a very dangerous game,'' Mr. Black said
as he sat in his office the other day. ``It's like the
showdown at the O.K. Corral. Who's going to blink first? So I
can't help but have some of this spill over into my prayer.
Because you're hoping that something will get through and
that cooler heads will prevail.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I picked up the newspaper, at least went
online to look at the newspapers from Illinois this morning, and two
stories jumped right off the page. One was in the Bloomington
Pantagraph. What a great story it is and makes me so proud to be from
the Midwest and to represent people who are, by their very nature,
pretty darned extraordinary. It is a story that comes out of Lexington,
IL, about an event that happened yesterday, and I will quote just a bit
of it.
More than 60 area farmers, truckers and their families
gathered north of Lexington on Sunday morning to pay back a
friend who had helped them out at one time or another during
his 71-year lifetime. Some 16 combines harvested more than
300 acres of corn as friends of Dave Thomas brought in
Thomas' last harvest. Thomas died of a heart attack on July
22 and his wife Sharon and four sons, decided to end the
family's farm operations.
The article went on to say how it broke the family's heart to give up
this family farm, but these neighbors pitched in. They wanted to
harvest David Thomas' land and to make sure that last crop was brought
in for his family. It is the kind of compassion and caring and family
and community which we see in many States, but I see over and over in
my home State of Illinois.
This is not unique. It happens often, and every time it does it is
worthy of note because it is such a special comment on the people of
this great Nation and their caring for their neighbors.
The area farmers in Chenoa, not too far from Lexington, are planning
a similar harvest operation for another neighbor, David Harrison, this
morning. Dave passed away last week.
Time and again these farm families put aside their own physical
comfort, their own daily schedules, their own lives to help one
another. It is such a wonderful comment on this great Nation that we
call home and the area I am so proud to represent.
The second article that jumped off the page after I read this came
out of Kansas--Wichita, KS--and it quotes Tim Peterson. He is a wheat
farmer. I am not as familiar with wheat as I am corn and soybeans, but
he started talking about the problems he is running into. His problems
are created by us because Tim doesn't have access to vital agricultural
reports. They are casualties of the Federal Government shutdown. We
stopped publishing this information, and farmers such as Tim
[[Page S7248]]
Peterson and others are forced to make some very important family
decisions, some important financial decisions without the necessary
information.
These reports can alert them to shortfalls in overseas markets or if
there is a wide swing in acres planted, both of which might prompt U.S.
growers to plant extra crops to meet demand or hang on to a harvest a
little longer to get a better price.
Here are these farmers across the Midwest who have worked hard to
reach this point in the harvest where they can make enough money to
live and to plant another year, to sustain their families and
communities around them, and they have a problem. The problem is the
politicians in Washington who want to shut down the government.
What a contrast: farmers who rallied in Lexington, IL, for the family
of a fallen farmer, to show they would stand by him through thick and
thin and help him out--at least his family out through this adversity--
and then this article and story in Kansas, where the Congressmen and
Senators sent to Washington to do their job and to provide the basic
information for these farmers have failed and in failing have made it
much more difficult for these farmers.
Two articles in the morning papers from the central part of the
United States of America, which brings home to me the graphic human
side of this government shutdown. Something else brought it home
personally. When Harry Reid, our majority leader, announced we weren't
going to have votes on Saturday or Sunday, I took the opportunity to
get out of town and I raced off to be with my grandkids.
I have two twin grandchildren, 22 months old, and I just love them to
pieces. I thought getting away with them is exactly what I need, to get
out of this town and to get my mind straight after a tough political
week. We had a ball. We did the normal things one would expect: going
to the park and reading ``Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?''
and all the things that are fun for a grandfather.
There were a couple moments, though--you see, they are almost 2 years
old, and there were a couple moments during the weekend where one of
them would lose it for just a little while and start crying and
screaming uncontrollably and saying the word ``no'' over and over again
and unable to express themselves because they just don't have the
vocabulary to tell us what is on their minds. In those moments I felt
as though I was back in Washington again.
The terrible twos temper tantrums sounded like Congress--people
shouting no, screaming uncontrollably, and unable to express what they
are doing and why they are doing it, and that is where we find
ourselves today.
On the morning talk shows yesterday, on Sunday, a number of leaders
came to speak, and of course everybody was focused on Speaker Boehner
because he is the captain of the ship when it comes to the government
shutdown, but it was interesting to me that what guided this government
shutdown last week--ObamaCare, the health care reform bill--they were
not talking about so much anymore. It has been launched, and 9 million
people across America have visited the Web site because they are
interested in finding health insurance maybe for the first time in
their lives or health insurance they can afford--9 million.
Because so many have come to these Web sites, the Republican leader
is right, we have had trouble getting them moving forward. It will take
a few days to adjust to this volume of people coming on board to find
out whether this insurance exchange can help them, their family or the
business. The good news for my colleague Senator McConnell, from
Kentucky, is that his State has been a real success story, with 8,000
people having already signed up in Kentucky for health insurance on the
insurance exchange of ObamaCare.
I hope Senator McConnell and Senator Rand Paul take some pride in the
fact that now 8,000--at least 8,000--Kentuckians have health insurance
they can afford and they can trust, some of them for the first time in
their lives. When I hear this news, I wonder how these Senators from
Kentucky and some other States can say we want to repeal this, we want
to get rid of this.
What are they going to tell those 8,000 families who finally have
health insurance for the first time? Big mistake. Sorry. Go back to the
marketplace where you have no health insurance protection. That is
hardly the response Americans want to hear in Kentucky, Illinois, in
Maine or any other State.
What we are trying to do with ObamaCare, the health care reform act,
is to open up an opportunity for 40 to 50 million Americans to have
health insurance they can afford for the first time in their lives.
What we have heard from the other side of the aisle is: Repeal it.
Defund it. Delay it. Do anything you can to stop it. Stop it.
You know why they want to stop it? Because they understand that once
people's appetites are whetted for health care insurance they can
afford and insurance where they can protect their families, there is no
turning back. We are at a point in history, much as we were with the
creation of Social Security and Medicare, where we are offering to
families across America something they could not do by themselves and
something they will value very much as part of their families and their
future, and that is what is driving this fear on the other side of the
aisle. That is what is driving the government shutdown.
What is worse is October 17, the next deadline, and it is not that
far away. In another 9 or 10 days we are going to face a debt ceiling
expiration. The debt ceiling is basically America's mortgage. We have
to extend our mortgage. We borrow money to manage our government, to
fight wars, to pay our military, to do the most basic things. When we
borrow that money, we have to have authorization from the government.
That is the debt ceiling.
Many of the same Senators and Congressmen who voted for this spending
now will not vote to pay the bill. That is akin to eating the big meal
at the restaurant and, when the waiter brings the check, saying: I
ain't paying. How long would that last? That is what many are
suggesting when they say we are not going to extend the debt ceiling.
They have eaten the meal. They just don't want to pay the bill.
It would be the first time in the history of the United States we
would default on our national debt. The first time we would basically
violate the full faith and credit of the United States of America. It
has its consequences. The last time the tea party did this, America's
credit rating suffered. What happens when our credit rating suffers?
The interest rates we pay go up. Taxpayers are paying more to China and
countries that loan us money than they are paying to educate children,
to build roads or do medical research.
Here we go again. Another threat by the Speaker that we are going to
default on our national debt again. They threatened it 2 years ago, and
they have come back again--the tea party. This is totally
irresponsible.
I read the newspapers from different countries and they look at the
United States and shake their head and they wonder how this country,
which many say--and I can certainly see the reason for it--is one of
the leaders in the world, can find itself in this manufactured
political crisis again and again and again. It is like the temper
tantrums of the terrible twos when we hear this. We think it is totally
unnecessary. We have to help these kids grow up and get through it.
America has to grow up and stand and say to Congress: It is time for
you to grow up and stand and do the right thing for the future of this
country.
I hope we can do this, and I hope we can do it together in a
bipartisan fashion. This shutdown of the Federal Government should end
today. The Speaker has before him a continuing resolution which he
could pass, could pass in a heartbeat, and the government would be
extended. The farmer out in Kansas would have the information he needs,
the medical researcher would be back to work at the National Institutes
of Health, and all of the agencies of the government would be
functioning for the good of the American people. That is what we were
sent to do. There are no excuses and no political reasons not to.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Georgia.
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I wish to thank the distinguished Senator
[[Page S7249]]
from Illinois, the distinguished majority whip, for bringing up
Chaplain Barry Black's name and the article that appeared in the New
York Times. I know Senator Durbin and I do a lot of things together.
One of those things is just about every Wednesday morning we attend the
Senate Prayer Breakfast. Replete through all of Barry's prayers at that
breakfast is always one word, and that is ``humility.'' I think the
message in that article in the New York Times and the message in the
prayers in the last 7 or 8 days in the Senate and the message to all of
us right now is that we need to grasp a little humility and find common
ground among consternation and move this country forward.
To that end, I want to make my suggestion, for what it is worth, and
I want to make mine as an inspiration with Senator Collins, the other
Senator from the State of Maine who last week made her proposal. If we
can't find common ground with the arguments we have today, let's
proffer a new proposal to give us a chance to solve our problem.
Susan Collins made a great suggestion, to replace the medical device
tax with other revenue so it doesn't cut the revenue and to get back to
sequestration but only by cutting defense agencies, not by cutting
across the board. That made a lot of sense. It provides a way to absorb
those cuts but does so in a professional way.
So I come to the floor in a Robert Frost moment. You know the poem:
``Two roads diverged in a yellow wood. . . . I took the one
less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.''
We have been traveling down the wrong road for far too long. We are
here today, in large measure, arguing over a CR we shouldn't have to be
arguing over. Had we been doing our appropriations and doing our
budgets over the last 4 years, the money would have been spent, the
regular order would have been in place, the fiscal year moneys would
have been appropriated, and there would be no need for a CR.
There is bipartisan responsibility for not having done a budget or an
appropriations act. The leadership, obviously, controls the floor, so
they can bring the appropriations act forward and that is their
responsibility. But we have also cried out on our side for a budget.
Year after year, let's have a budget. Now we have a budget, one
approved by the House and one approved by the Senate, but an inability
to go to conference because we can't get agreement on preconditions.
Once again, this is another situation of not negotiating over something
that is important to the American people.
So I have a suggestion, a suggestion that two-thirds of this Senate
agreed to in the budget debate we had in March, a decision that 20
States have exercised in our country that has made them better, a
decision the State of Israel made 2 or 3 years ago when they got into
such dire financial conditions and went to the World Bank for
suggestions; that is, let's force our CR and add to it a simple
resolution that changes our way of doing business to a biennial budget
and appropriations act, where we force ourselves to appropriate over 2
years and not 1, and make those appropriations in the odd-numbered
years so that in the even-numbered years we do only oversight.
It would make a lot of difference for the American people if we were
arguing over not how much bacon we were bringing home but how much
money we were saving through oversight, savings, and fiscal
accountability. I have introduced that legislation, along with Senator
Shaheen--a Democrat from New Hampshire and a Governor who ran a State
under a biennial budget. It makes sense, it is humble, it is the right
way to do business, and it ends this necessity of having continuing
resolutions at the last minute because we didn't do our job.
Let's face it. We are here today in the conundrum we are in because
we did not do our job. We did not pass a budget and go to a conference
committee, we didn't have appropriations acts, so we are doing a
continuing resolution into a new fiscal year. That is no way to run the
greatest country on the face of this Earth. Four years and running we
have shirked our responsibility. It is time for a new day in the
Senate. It is time for a biennial budget. It worked for Israel. If it
worked for 20 States, it will work for us. It establishes priorities,
it ends waste, fraud, and abuse, and it brings about good decisions.
Last night on ``60 Minutes,'' Senator Tom Coburn from Oklahoma was
featured, and the feature was about SSI disability and the fact that we
now pay $135 billion a year in SSI disability payments--a trebling of
those costs in just a few years--and fully 25 to 40 percent we know is
fraudulent. Twenty-five to forty percent is $40 to $60 billion. You can
do a lot with $40 to $60 billion. That is where transparency and
oversight works.
There is nobody better than the Senator from Oklahoma in terms of
oversight and nobody more humble than the Senator from Oklahoma, but
when he knows he is right, he is going to work hard to do what is
right, and that is what all of us should be doing.
Referring to the Senator from Oklahoma, I go back to the Workforce
Investment Act, which Senator Murray and I are working very hard to
bring to the floor. In that, Senator Coburn found forty-four
duplicative job training programs in nine different agencies--over and
over again. We are appropriating money forty-four different times to
nine different agencies to do workforce training when we really only
ought to be doing one. If we were budgeting on a 2-year basis and doing
other oversight in even-numbered years, there would be no limit to the
successes we could have, the transparency we could enforce, the
agreements we could come to, and the lack of cliff management we are in
today.
The debt ceiling we face in about 10 days is a debt ceiling we face
because we are having to borrow more money to run our government. We
are having to borrow more money to run our government because we are
not doing fiscal accountability, we are not doing appropriating, and we
are going to continue for that to grow and grow.
As a businessman and a saver, I know what the time value of money is.
The time value of money means that if you put away a little bit of
money every year and save for your kids' education, for your health
care, or whatever it might be, when the time comes and you need it, you
will have it. But I also know what the time cost of money is: when you
are borrowing money to pay off borrowed money--and that is where we are
in the United States of America today. So that is why this debt ceiling
crisis is such a big issue.
I would submit, and humbly, that the Shaheen-Isakson legislation that
forces us to do our regular order of business of appropriating, forces
us to budget, and forces us to do it every year puts us back to the
kind of discipline and job responsibility we really need around this
place. Instead of arguing about what we can't agree upon, we ought to
find common ground and run our country's household the way American
families run their households. If we had to do here in Washington what
every American family has to do year in and year out, this place would
be a whole lot different.
It is time that we find humility, find common ground, do what 20 of
the 50 States do, do what the State of Israel has done, and do what 67
Senators said we ought to do in the budget debate back in March; that
is, pass a biennial and appropriations act, end this foolishness, and
gain back some of the humility we richly deserve.
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I be allowed
2 extra minutes to pay tribute to a physician in my county.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
(The further remarks of Mr. Isakson are printed in today's Record
under ``Morning Business.'')
Mr. Isakson. Mr. President, I yield back the remainder of my time.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Georgia for his
call on this place to get back to regular order and to bridge our
differences. I think it is an important one and a noble and hopefully
easy request for us to ultimately follow.
I came down here this weekend to talk about a young woman in
Bridgeport, CT, who is at the epicenter of the fallout of this
shutdown, and I wanted to come back down on Monday to tell her story
very briefly once again because the way a lot of trade papers
[[Page S7250]]
cover this shutdown makes it seem as if this is just about politics. If
you listen to some commentators and some members of the tea party crowd
in the House of Representatives, they will tell you that what we are
going to find in this shutdown is that everybody is going to learn that
the government really doesn't do that much and it is not that big a
deal if it goes away for a couple of months, a couple of weeks, a
couple of days.
What we are finding as we enter week 2 of this shutdown is we have
now moved past the point where the collapse of the government is just
an inconvenience. It is now ruining lives. I wish Melanie Rhodes was
the exception, but she is increasingly becoming the rule across the
country. The Presiding Officer heard me tell her story this weekend,
but I am going to do it again.
Melanie was homeless a couple years ago. She lives in the
southwestern portion of Connecticut. She had hit really hard times, but
she decided to pull her life together--not the least of the reasons
being that she has a little boy. She has a son Malachi. Malachi was
born about 2 months premature, so he was born with some developmental
disabilities that luckily, because of a government program, were caught
early on. The program is called Birth to Three. In Connecticut, it is
our early intervention program. Most States have it. It is one of the
programs that are going to run out of funds pretty soon if we don't
start turning back on the faucet to State governments.
But even more important to Melanie was that through that early
intervention screening program that figured out Malachi needed a little
bit of extra help, they got him into a Head Start Program. He wasn't
even 1 year old when he started the Head Start Program. Today he is 3,
and he is making incredible progress. He has some serious issues. He is
just now learning how to communicate with some signs he has been
taught. But he is doing better and doing better every single day.
On Monday night of last week Melanie stayed up all night watching to
see whether the government was still going to be operating because she
knew the Bridgeport Head Start Program works on a fiscal year that
matches ours. So if the government shut down on October 1, the check
wouldn't come to Bridgeport Head Start and they would have to send
1,000 kids home.
But she also knew her life was starting to get brighter in other ways
as well. She had been looking for a job for a long time and she had
done everything we asked of her. She had applied to everybody she could
think of, from Walmart to Walgreens to McDonald's, and hadn't found
anything until a bus company decided to hire her as a driver. She had
gone through her training; she was just waiting for her background
check to come back. It was going to be OK and she was going to start
work. But, of course, the only way she could start work was if she had
care for her child. As she has said so eloquently over the past week,
she can't just leave Malachi with anybody because he is a kid with
substantial difficulties and his caregivers need to know how to take
care of him. So if there is no Head Start, there is no school for
Malachi, he regresses in terms of the progress he has made, and she
can't start her job. Her family essentially collapses around her simply
because this place can't pass a budget. That is what is happening to
Melanie, and she says simply this: We need our government and our
businesses open. Why should we suffer and be held hostage while
government can't do what they need to do?
Her story can be repeated thousands of times across Connecticut. I
think I saw today that about 18,000 Head Start slots are going to be
closed by the end of this week. Unfortunately, her story is not the
exception; it is becoming the rule. This is what this shutdown means.
It is not playacting. It is real.
As I watched some of the shows over the weekend, I heard a familiar
refrain from our Republican colleagues. They said: Yeah, we have this
demand that we want the health care law delayed or repealed or defunded
in order to get the government up and operating, but really it is the
Democrats. It is Harry Reid, it is President Obama who won't sit down
and negotiate. If they would just sit down and negotiate, then we could
end this whole thing.
I understand how some people might watch and think to themselves, why
won't the Democrats just sit down and talk about this? So I would like
to address this claim that the only thing stopping us from reopening
the government is Democrats won't talk to Republicans. I want to
address that in five simple ways.
First, I would make the point that every single one of my colleagues
has made: We have already talked. What we thought we were talking about
was a continuing resolution, a temporary budget that would keep the
government operating for about 6 weeks. A lot of Democratic critics
actually would argue that we didn't really negotiate that well over
that particular issue because in the end the Senate passed a budget
with a particular number for the continuing resolution, the House
passed a budget with a particular number for the continuing resolution,
and the difference was pretty substantial, but in the end the Senate
just decided to go with the House number. We didn't settle in between.
We didn't settle closer to ours or closer to theirs. We just took the
House number. So we kind of feel, on the subject at hand, which is the
continuing resolution, that the negotiation has already happened and we
gave the House everything they wanted. There is not much more to
negotiate after you give them everything when it comes to the bottom-
line number in the continuing resolution.
Second, it is kind of hard to have a negotiation when only one side
is making demands. We don't have any demands in this negotiation. All
we want is for the things that normally happen to continue to happen--
i.e., we want the government to stay open on the exact same terms the
government was open last week and the week before. We want the country
to pay our bills just as we have paid our bills for a generation. It is
only Republicans--and, frankly, not all Republicans. Most Republicans
in the Senate are not making these demands. It is mainly a small
handful in the House and the Senate who say: In order to keep the
government open, we want the health care law defunded or repealed or
delayed.
It is difficult to have a negotiation when all we want is the status
quo.
It is kind of like if two people lived in a house and one of them
said: I am going to take the roof off the house if you don't do what I
want. You wouldn't really negotiate that. That is an unreasonable
demand. The roof just needs to be there. It is something that, for good
reason, is normally not the subject of debate or negotiation. And you
wouldn't settle for half. You wouldn't allow your roommate to take half
the roof off. The roof just needs to be there, and if you are angry
with me about something or you want to talk about something, let's do
it while the roof is still on.
We can't negotiate over the government just operating. We can't
negotiate over whether or not we are going to pay our bills. We don't
want anything. We just want things to happen as they have happened in
the past.
Third, this place just can't operate if in order to keep the
government open for 6 weeks we have to satisfy everybody's personal
political agenda.
I also said this weekend I have things I believe in very strongly. I
represent Sandy Hook, CT. I submit I feel just as strongly about
background checks as the Senator from Texas does about the repeal of
the health care bill. But it would be unreasonable for me to say I am
not going to vote for a budget because I don't get my way on background
checks or immigration reform or tax fairness or whatever it may be that
I care about outside the confines of the continuing resolution. If all
100 Senators had to get their particular nonbudgetary political points
settled as a requirement of passing a continuing resolution, this place
would absolutely collapse.
Maybe that is what some people want. Maybe some people want
government to collapse and the government to shut down. But when I hear
people talk on this floor, I take them at face value, that that is not
what they want. Ultimately we all cannot get what we need all the time.
Fourth, you normally need to compromise when you do not have
consensus, when you do not have agreement, when both the Senate and the
House do not have the majority of
[[Page S7251]]
their Members agreeing to the exact same thing. In that case you need
to negotiate because clearly we do not have consensus, and so we have
to get two sides together to find consensus.
We have consensus. We have a bill the majority of Senators supports,
the majority of House Members supports, the President is ready to sign
the minute it gets to his desk. That is what is referred to as a clean
continuing resolution, a bill that would keep the government operating
for the next 6 weeks on the same terms it was operating beforehand. The
only reason why that is not law today is because Speaker Boehner will
not bring that up for a vote in the House of Representatives. But it
reportedly enjoys the support of more than 216 Members of the House,
which is what you need today to get that bill passed. It has already
passed the Senate.
Last, as Senator Durbin talked about, what Republicans are demanding
as their condition to keep the government up and operating is no less
than the repeal of the signature achievement of President Obama's first
term, the most important bill I have ever worked on, the most important
vote I have ever cast. That is the health care law which is today
saving millions of dollars for senior citizens in their Medicare
benefits and right now is providing a lifeline to millions of Americans
who need cheaper insurance.
It is why poll after poll tells you that although people are still
split on whether they agree with the exact prescription for our health
care economy laid out in the bill we passed, they sure as heck do not
want us to repeal the law. By about a 2-to-1 margin people say don't
repeal the law, let it go into effect, give it a shot. It is also why
by a 3-to-1 margin people do not agree with shutting down the
government over the repeal of the health care law. It is why 9 million
people have gone onto the Federal health care reform Web site to see
what their options are. It is why, as Senator Durbin said, even in
States such as Kentucky, people are signing up by the thousands. In the
first day of Connecticut's exchange we had more visits to the Web site
than we had in the entire month previous. People are desperate for
lower cost health care out there. Sick people and families with sick
children have been waiting lifetimes to finally be able to get
insurance for their loved ones.
People need this health care reform law to go into effect. It is
simply not true, as the Senator from Texas and others have said, that
people do not want this law. They have shown us how badly and
desperately they need it by the flood of interest in the exchanges over
the first week, and in poll after poll the American people say loudly
they do not want this repealed.
It is hard to get major social change passed in this town. The
Founding Fathers intentionally set up a process by which something such
as health care reform seems nearly impossible. That is why it took 100
years since Teddy Roosevelt first proposed that we guarantee access to
our health care system for all Americans for it to happen.
You have a lot of chances for that idea to crater. You need both
Chambers to pass the exact same bill, you need a President willing to
sign it, you need the courts to uphold it, and then you need the
electorate to confirm it when everybody who voted for it stands for
reelection again.
The reason why we are implementing the health care law today and the
reason why most Americans want it to go forward is we passed every
single one of those tests. For the first time in a hundred years the
exact same proposal to reform our health care system passed with a
majority of both the House and the Senate and was signed by our
President. The Supreme Court reviewed the law and stamped that it was
constitutional. Then this President and every Member of the Senate who
voted for the health care bill went out to stand for reelection in
2012, based on the promise they would continue to implement the law.
The President was reelected by a resounding margin and every Senator in
this Chamber who voted for the health care law won reelection. The bill
passed, the courts upheld it, voters confirmed their original choices.
People want this law.
We already compromised on the amount in the continuing resolution. It
cannot be much of a negotiation when all we want is for the government
to stay up and operating and for us to pay our bills. This place cannot
work if, every time you negotiate a budget, everybody has to have their
own political priorities taken care of.
We do not need to negotiate because we already have a bill that
enjoys the support of both Chambers and will be signed by the President
if only the House of Representatives will call it for a vote. The idea
that people do not want the health care law simply is not borne out
either by the polls or by people's conduct on the exchanges over the
last 2 weeks.
Melanie Rhodes is waiting for an answer from us. Malachi needs to get
back into preschool, ASAP. He is a little autistic boy who, every
single day he sits home by himself, is marching a little bit more
quickly backward off the progress gained through this program, funded
not by government but by all of us, because we thought it was important
that little boys with autism growing up in poor families with moms who
used to be homeless should have a chance at success in life. Every day
we continue to reverse our collective decision as a society that
Malachi should get some help, he goes backward and backward. His mom,
to whom we said: You know what. Pick yourself up by your bootstraps, do
the right thing for yourself and your child--she did it. She got him
into Head Start, she found a job, and now because that program is shut
down, she likely will not be able to start her job. He moves backward.
She moves backward.
It is not because Democrats will not negotiate.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I thank my colleague from Connecticut
for those eloquent and very powerful remarks, and I will take advantage
of his presence here to perhaps engage in a colloquy, if he agrees to
doing so, asking him, because he spoke so wonderfully about that one
family, whether he has seen, as I have seen, that story of deprivation
and setback duplicated on a bigger scale throughout our State?
Mr. MURPHY. I thank my colleague from Connecticut for the question.
As he knows, there are a thousand different children in that one Head
Start Program alone who have essentially lost access to childcare. This
week I think the number is, as the Senator knows, about 18,000 kids
across the country who will lose access to health care. As we have
seen, it has already had a big effect in our State because we have so
many defense manufacturers. Some of the initial furloughs to civilians
have caused a loss of work among families who could not afford it. We
are seeing over and over how this shutdown trickles down.
Frankly, it is affecting the very families who cannot afford to miss
a paycheck, the very families who cannot make quick arrangements to
find somebody else to take care of their autistic child. As the Senator
has seen and knows, this is affecting, in our small State, thousands
and thousands of residents who did not have a lot of wiggle room when
it came to the support that was standing around them due to programs
run by the Federal Government.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. In fact, I think statistics show more than a thousand
children and their families are directly affected by this shutdown in
Head Start alone. Seniors, in terms of nutritional assistance--I do not
know whether my good friend and very distinguished colleague from
Connecticut has seen that phenomenon as well in Bridgeport and
throughout our State of Connecticut and would care to remark on it?
Mr. MURPHY. I would say to the Senator, we have had this effort on
behalf of Republicans to kind of pick and choose which parts of the
government they are going to reopen. As I noted here on the floor in
objecting to one of these piecemeal requests, that exact program my
colleague referred to, the senior nutrition program which provides
meals to very low-income and often very frail seniors who are getting
them either at a senior center or delivered to them through the Meals
On Wheels Program, was not initially one of the programs that
Republicans chose to reopen.
That is why we object to this piecemeal approach. It is bad policy to
allow
[[Page S7252]]
for a wing of this House or the other House to pick and choose which
people they help, leaving on the outside, as the Senator mentioned,
some who are very deserving, such as very frail and often very hungry
senior citizens.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. What is needed, I think my colleague would agree, is
an end to the shutdown, reopening government--not for the sake of
reopening the government but to provide these vital services and
assurance that the United States of America, the greatest Nation in the
history of the world, is going to continue paying its debts. Then and
only then have a conference and a compromise and collaboration on what
our overall budget should be with smart spending cuts and increases in
revenue that close some loopholes and subsidies. I think that was the
thrust, was it not, of what my colleague from Connecticut had to say?
Mr. MURPHY. I think the majority leader made it very clear he is
willing to sit down to talk about everything and anything the
Republicans want to discuss but not with a gun to our heads. Let's
reopen the government. Then, as we as a Chamber have been willing to do
over and over, let's sit down in a budget conference with everything
part of that budget on the table.
But this just cannot happen every time that one faction of one House
does not get their way, they shut down the government until their
particular demands are remediated.
As I was saying, Senator Blumenthal and I care deeply about the issue
of background checks. He worked his entire life on this issue. But
given his life's work, he is still not coming to this Chamber and
demanding until he gets his way on that issue, which is of such vital
importance to his constituents and mine, that he will shut down the
government.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. In fact, what is happening is a small fraction of one
House of the Congress--in fact, in the House of Representatives, one
small group of rightwing extremists, whatever they may characterize
themselves as--is holding hostage the entire House of Representatives,
the entire Congress, the entire government, even though it is only one
branch and one part of a branch. I think Senator Murphy has explained
well our view--and our constituents in Connecticut need to know it--we
are willing to compromise and collaborate but not with hostage-taking
tactics that in effect say to everyone else in the country: It is our
way or the highway.
I thank my colleague from Connecticut for speaking so clearly and
persuasively on his topic, and for giving the impact of this government
shutdown a human face and a human voice. The story he told from
Bridgeport has indeed thousands of others just like it across the State
of Connecticut, across the country, who are suffering the real hardship
and harm of this shutdown.
We can talk in the abstract here. Our rhetoric may carry a little bit
beyond these four walls. But the real-life consequences belong to them.
Both Senator Murphy and I have seen them in real life and that is why
we are here to advocate and fight for those people of Connecticut, in
Bridgeport, those families who depend on Head Start, those seniors who
depend on nutritional assistance--he has told their story, and that of
Sikorsky, so well today in this Chamber. These men and women, and their
families, do great work for our Nation on their assembly lines.
Black Hawk helicopters are the best-made helicopters in the Nation.
They perform rescue operations for our troops in Afghanistan. They
medevac our Nation's warriors to places where they can be saved. They
provide resupply and provisions. They are literally lifesaving vehicles
in our war to keep America safe.
Those workers in Sikorsky were told late last week: You are done. You
are furloughed. Do not report to work next week because 45 inspectors--
civilian employees of the U.S. Department of Defense--are going to be
furloughed. The 45 inspectors and 1,500 or 2,000 or more workers at
Sikorsky who work on the Black Hawk helicopter assembly line, and other
product assembly as well, were told they were going to be furloughed.
Senator Murphy and I, and other members of our delegation, spoke with
officials of the Department of Defense. We made our interpretation of
the recently passed law clear to them and told them that it applies to
employees of the Defense Contract Management Agency whose services were
vital to certify and inspect those helicopters. We needed to keep the
assembly lines at Sikorsky open in order to make sure that Black Hawk
helicopters were continuing to be available to our military men and
women who depend on them so vitally.
Those conversations--and I am sure others had them as well--with
officials at the Department of Defense, along with the action of the
House over the weekend, will make sure that all of the furloughed
employees who work for the U.S. Government will eventually be paid.
Secretary Hagel was persuaded to do the right thing. I commend and
thank Secretary Hagel for bringing back those employees, such as the 45
DCMA inspectors, who have to be there for the Department of Defense in
order to take delivery of those helicopters, which, in turn, is
necessary to keep the assembly line open and keep Sikorsky workers
employed and on the job with the countless other hard-working men and
women defense contractors across the United States.
I thank Secretary Hagel, but at the same time we need to recognize
that for every Sikorsky helicopter situation, for every Fortune 500
corporation, and for every one of those big defense contractors, there
are literally thousands of suppliers and small businesses that are
continuing in uncertainty, and sometimes confusion, about what is
happening here in Washington.
There are thousands of other businesses that depend on those
suppliers because they provide the raw materials for the parts for the
Sikorsky helicopters. The ripple effect and the ramifications pervade
our economy and our society. The uncertainty creates harm and hardship
that is immeasurable and perhaps irreparable.
The harm is not only to those workers who rightly have whiplash from
being furloughed one day and being called back another and then being
uncertain as to what impact this shutdown will ultimately have; there
are suppliers and the countless other small businesses that cannot
plan, cannot look ahead, cannot hire for the future, and sometimes they
have to tell their workers: You are going to be furloughed. You cannot
plan to buy a car or a new home or even the most minor things such as
school supplies--or make other plans, for that matter.
Lives hang in the balance; lives are at stake. The real-life
consequences are real and perhaps lasting for many Americans--not only
the family who depends on Head Start or the senior nutrition assistance
or the jobs in Sikorsky, but there are countless others whose lives
also hang in the balance.
There is a solution to this impasse. Calmer minds, cooler heads, and
common sense are beginning to reach a consensus that the House should
be given a chance to vote, and that the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, John Boehner, should enable that vote. He should very
simply provide an opportunity to Republicans and Democrats--not
singling out one side or the other--to come together on a bipartisan
basis.
Who cares who is in the minority of that vote as long as it reopens
the government and provides Head Start, nutritional assistance, and
enables some certainty that permits our economy to move forward
rationally and sensibly so we can recover from the great recession? We
need to grow jobs and enable the economy to reach some measure of
prosperity. We all have an interest in that outcome. We should all be
pulling for America. We should all be assured that the greatest nation
in the history of the world will leave no doubt that it will pay its
bills on time and that it will fulfill its obligations on time, just as
we have for every year in the history of this great Nation.
There is a way to come together. I have heard from my colleagues on
both sides of the aisle that the time has come to end this impasse.
Simply let the House vote.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Vermont.
[[Page S7253]]
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, all over this country the American people
are outraged by what is going on here in Washington. They have a hard
time understanding why rightwing extremists in the Republican Party in
the House are able to shut down the U.S. Government, while paychecks
are being denied to millions of Federal employees and, at the same
time, services--in some cases desperately needed services--are being
threatened for tens of millions of Americans. People are hurting and
they wonder what is going on.
Let me say a few words regarding what, in my view, has, in fact,
happened. From the beginning, some of my Republican colleagues are
saying: We just need to talk. Let's compromise. A key point they
neglect to make is that a major compromise has already taken place. The
Democrats in the Senate--and I am an independent, as is the Presiding
Officer, affiliated with the Democratic Caucus--decided to send a
budget for a continuing resolution to the House, which, in my view, was
a very, very weak budget, one that I am totally dissatisfied with, and
I think most Members of the caucus are. It continues the budget at
sequestration levels which will have a devastating impact on this
country. It is a bad budget. But the reason the majority leader sent it
over to the House was that he was of the understanding that the Speaker
of the House had requested that type of budget, and that once that
budget came over--once that CR came over--the House would agree to it.
In fact, let me read from an article in the Washington Post today
commenting on an ABC interview that Speaker Boehner did. The Washington
Post says:
In the ABC interview, Boehner tacitly acknowledged making a
deal with Senate Democrats to avoid using the threat of a
shutdown to attack ObamaCare in exchange for an agreement to
maintain the deep cuts known as the sequester through the
fall. He conceded that his rank and file forced him onto the
path to shutdown by insisting on waging the fight over
ObamaCare.
That was the Washington Post today.
What does that mean? It means that an agreement had been reached by
the Speaker and the majority leader that if the Democrats accepted the
very low budget number the Republicans wanted, there would be a clean
continuing resolution. What this article points out--and what I think
the Speaker has virtually acknowledged--is that despite his agreement
with the majority leader here in the Senate, he couldn't carry it out
because his extreme rightwing said: Thanks. You got us the budget we
wanted, the CR we wanted. That is not enough. Now we want to end
ObamaCare.
That is where we are today.
So anyone who comes forward and says: Why don't you talk? Why don't
you compromise? The fact is--and I think the majority leader has made
this point--he compromised far more than many of us felt comfortable
with.
A compromise has already been reached. The Democrats accepted, in my
view, a very bad and weak Republican budget. But it was done with the
hope and the understanding that there would be a clean continuing
resolution and that the U.S. Government would not be shut down. That is
point No. 1.
Point No. 2 is that the other day the Speaker said on TV that there
are not the votes to pass a clean CR. What I have been hearing here on
the floor of the Senate and in the House is that we have Republicans
who are not sympathetic to ObamaCare, they don't like ObamaCare, and
they would like to defund ObamaCare. But they understand we don't shut
down the U.S. Government. We don't threaten that for the first time in
the history of the United States we may not pay our bills, be a
deadbeat Nation, and drive our economy and our financial system, and
perhaps the entire world's financial system, into a catastrophic area
by not paying our bills. We believe that there are enough Republicans
in the House to join with Democrats and pass a clean CR.
The President and the majority leader have both made this point: Have
the vote. Have the vote, Mr. Speaker. Maybe you are right or maybe you
are not. But we don't know until you have the vote. I urge, as I have
before, that the Speaker of the House function as the Speaker of the
House of Representatives and not as the speaker of the Republican
Party.
The last point I wish to make touches on an article that appeared in
yesterday's New York Times. It is a very important article because it
really tells us who is behind this shutdown and what their motives are.
If anybody thinks this government shutdown or the threats about not
paying our bills and driving the world's economy into catastrophic
areas are ideas that just occurred the other day, that a Senator just
had this bright idea, they would be very mistaken. The fact is we have
a growing rightwing movement in this country funded by some of the
wealthiest people in America, including the Koch brothers, a family
that has made their money in fossil fuels and are worth over $70
billion--$70 billion is their worth. They are worth $70 billion, and
they have access to the best health care in the world. They have access
to the best housing in the world. Their family members can go to the
best colleges and universities in the world. Yet they are obsessed
with, among other things, making sure 25 million Americans have no
health insurance at all.
I am a strong supporter of a Medicare for all, a single-payer
program. I don't think the Affordable Care Act went far enough. But to
say the least, 20 million or 25 million Americans can finally have
access to health insurance. They can go to the doctor when they need to
go to the doctor. There are now no regulations that prevent them from
getting care because of a preexisting condition. Can we imagine
billionaires--billionaires--going to war against working people so they
and their kids cannot get health insurance? I think that is just
obscene. That is just obscene.
Let me quote from The New York Times article of yesterday. It is
important that people understand that the fight against the Affordable
Care Act is just the tip of the iceberg. We have families and
billionaires such as the Koch brothers who not only want to see that we
don't expand health insurance in this country, but they have a long
list of issues they are going after. In fact, they want to repeal
virtually every major piece of legislation passed in the last 80 years
that protects the middle class, working families, women, children, the
elderly, the sick, and the poor. That is their agenda. So it is not a
question of opposing the extension of health insurance through
ObamaCare; that is not enough for them. What they want to do is end
Medicare as we know it right now, and transform it into a voucher
system, that gives an elderly person who is dealing with cancer $8,000
and says: Good luck to you.
They want to make massive cuts in Medicaid. They don't want to expand
Medicaid. They want massive cuts. They are very clear about wanting to
end Social Security. They don't believe the Federal Government should
be involved in retirement issues and Social Security.
One of the more amazing things these guys want to do--and many of our
Republican colleagues apparently drank the lemonade on this issue--is
to abolish the concept of the minimum wage. The Federal minimum wage
now is $7.25 an hour. People can't live on that. But their idea is to
get the Federal Government out of the minimum wage issue--no floor--so
that if an employer in a hard-pressed area in Maine or in Vermont or in
Michigan can pay people $4 an hour, they think that is freedom: People
have the freedom to work for $4 an hour. We don't want a minimum wage.
So, in other words, these rightwing extremists and the big money
behind them have a major agenda, of which repealing ObamaCare is just
one small part.
Let me just quote, if I might, the New York Times article. I ask
unanimous consent to have the entire New York Times article printed in
the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the New York Times, Oct. 5, 2013]
A Federal Budget Crisis Months in the Planning
(By Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Mike McIntire)
Washington.--Shortly after President Obama started his
second term, a loose-knit coalition of conservative activists
led by former Attorney General Edwin Meese III
[[Page S7254]]
gathered in the capital to plot strategy. Their push to
repeal Mr. Obama's health care law was going nowhere, and
they desperately needed a new plan.
Out of that session, held one morning in a location the
members insist on keeping secret, came a little-noticed
``blueprint to defunding Obamacare,'' signed by Mr. Meese and
leaders of more than three dozen conservative groups.
It articulated a take-no-prisoners legislative strategy
that had long percolated in conservative circles: that
Republicans could derail the health care overhaul if
conservative lawmakers were willing to push fellow
Republicans--including their cautious leaders--into cutting
off financing for the entire federal government.
``We felt very strongly at the start of this year that the
House needed to use the power of the purse,'' said one
coalition member, Michael A. Needham, who runs Heritage
Action for America, the political arm of the Heritage
Foundation. ``At least at Heritage Action, we felt very
strongly from the start that this was a fight that we were
going to pick.''
Last week the country witnessed the fallout from that
strategy: a standoff that has shuttered much of the federal
bureaucracy and unsettled the nation.
To many Americans, the shutdown came out of nowhere. But
interviews with a wide array of conservatives show that the
confrontation that precipitated the crisis was the outgrowth
of a long-running effort to undo the law, the Affordable Care
Act, since its passage in 2010--waged by a galaxy of
conservative groups with more money, organized tactics and
interconnections than is commonly known.
With polls showing Americans deeply divided over the law,
conservatives believe that the public is behind them.
Although the law's opponents say that shutting down the
government was not their objective, the activists anticipated
that a shutdown could occur--and worked with members of the
Tea Party caucus in Congress who were excited about drawing a
red line against a law they despise.
A defunding ``tool kit'' created in early September
included talking points for the question, ``What happens when
you shut down the government and you are blamed for it?'' The
suggested answer was the one House Republicans give today:
``We are simply calling to fund the entire government except
for the Affordable Care Act/Obamacare.''
The current budget brinkmanship is just the latest
development in a well-financed, broad-based assault on the
health law, Mr. Obama's signature legislative initiative.
Groups like Tea Party Patriots, Americans for Prosperity and
FreedomWorks are all immersed in the fight, as is Club for
Growth, a business-backed nonprofit organization. Some, like
Generation Opportunity and Young Americans for Liberty, both
aimed at young adults, are upstarts. Heritage Action is new,
too, founded in 2010 to advance the policy prescriptions of
its sister group, the Heritage Foundation.
The billionaire Koch brothers, Charles and David, have been
deeply involved with financing the overall effort. A group
linked to the Kochs, Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce,
disbursed more than $200 million last year to nonprofit
organizations involved in the fight. Included was $5 million
to Generation Opportunity, which created a buzz last month
with an Internet advertisement showing a menacing Uncle Sam
figure popping up between a woman's legs during a
gynecological exam.
The groups have also sought to pressure vulnerable
Republican members of Congress with scorecards keeping track
of their health care votes; have burned faux ``Obamacare
cards'' on college campuses; and have distributed scripts for
phone calls to Congressional offices, sample letters to
editors and Twitter and Facebook offerings for followers to
present as their own.
One sample Twitter offering--``Obamacare is a train
wreck''--is a common refrain for Speaker John A. Boehner.
As the defunding movement picked up steam among outside
advocates, Republicans who sounded tepid became targets. The
Senate Conservatives Fund, a political action committee
dedicated to ``electing true conservatives,'' ran radio
advertisements against three Republican incumbents.
Heritage Action ran critical Internet advertisements in the
districts of 100 Republican lawmakers who had failed to sign
a letter by a North Carolina freshman, Representative Mark
Meadows, urging Mr. Boehner to take up the defunding cause.
``They've been hugely influential,'' said David Wasserman,
who tracks House races for the nonpartisan Cook Political
Report. ``When else in our history has a freshman member of
Congress from North Carolina been able to round up a gang of
80 that's essentially ground the government to a halt?''
On Capitol Hill, the advocates found willing partners in
Tea Party conservatives, who have repeatedly threatened to
shut down the government if they do not get their way on
spending issues. This time they said they were so alarmed by
the health law that they were willing to risk a shutdown over
it. (``This is exactly what the public wants,''
Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, founder of the
House Tea Party Caucus, said on the eve of the shutdown.)
Despite Mrs. Bachmann's comments, not all of the groups
have been on board with the defunding campaign. Some, like
the Koch-financed Americans for Prosperity, which spent $5.5
million on health care television advertisements over the
past three months, are more focused on sowing public doubts
about the law. But all have a common goal, which is to
cripple a measure that Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican
and leader of the defunding effort, has likened to a horror
movie.
``We view this as a long-term effort,'' said Tim Phillips,
the president of Americans for Prosperity. He said his group
expected to spend ``tens of millions'' of dollars on a
``multifront effort'' that includes working to prevent states
from expanding Medicaid under the law. The group's goal is
not to defund the law.
``We want to see this law repealed,'' Mr. Phillips said.
A Familiar Tactic
The crowd was raucous at the Hilton Anatole, just north of
downtown Dallas, when Mr. Needham's group, Heritage Action,
arrived on a Tuesday in August for the second stop on a nine-
city ``Defund Obamacare Town Hall Tour.'' Nearly 1,000 people
turned out to hear two stars of the Tea Party movement: Mr.
Cruz, and Jim DeMint, a former South Carolina senator who
runs the Heritage Foundation.
``You're here because now is the single best time we have
to defund Obamacare,'' declared Mr. Cruz, who would go on to
rail against the law on the Senate floor in September with a
monologue that ran for 21 hours. ``This is a fight we can
win.''
Although Mr. Cruz is new to the Senate, the tactic of
defunding in Washington is not. For years, Congress has
banned the use of certain federal money to pay for abortions,
except in the case of incest and rape, by attaching the so-
called Hyde Amendment to spending bills.
After the health law passed in 2010, Todd Tiahrt, then a
Republican congressman from Kansas, proposed defunding bits
and pieces of it. He said he spoke to Mr. Boehner's staff
about the idea while the Supreme Court, which upheld the
central provision, was weighing the law's constitutionality.
``There just wasn't the appetite for it at the time,'' Mr.
Tiahrt said in an interview. ``They thought, we don't need to
worry about it because the Supreme Court will strike it
down.''
But the idea of using the appropriations process to defund
an entire federal program, particularly one as far-reaching
as the health care overhaul, raised the stakes considerably.
In an interview, Mr. DeMint, who left the Senate to join the
Heritage Foundation in January, said he had been thinking
about it since the law's passage, in part because Republican
leaders were not more aggressive.
``They've been through a series of C.R.s and debt limits,''
Mr. DeMint said, referring to continuing resolutions on
spending, ``and all the time there was discussion of `O.K.,
we're not going to fight the Obamacare fight, we'll do it
next time.' The conservatives who ran in 2010 promising to
repeal it kept hearing, `This is not the right time to fight
this battle.' ''
Mr. DeMint is hardly alone in his distaste for the health
law, or his willingness to do something about it. In the
three years since Mr. Obama signed the health measure, Tea
Party-inspired groups have mobilized, aided by a financing
network that continues to grow, both in its complexity and
the sheer amount of money that flows through it.
A review of tax records, campaign finance reports and
corporate filings shows that hundreds of millions of dollars
have been raised and spent since 2012 by organizations, many
of them loosely connected, leading opposition to the measure.
One of the biggest sources of conservative money is Freedom
Partners, a tax-exempt ``business league'' that claims more
than 200 members, each of whom pays at least $100,000 in
dues. The group's board is headed by a longtime executive of
Koch Industries, the conglomerate run by the Koch brothers,
who were among the original financiers of the Tea Party
movement. The Kochs declined to comment.
While Freedom Partners has financed organizations that are
pushing to defund the law, like Heritage Action and Tea Party
Patriots, Freedom Partners has not advocated that. A
spokesman for the group, James Davis, said it was more
focused on ``educating Americans around the country on the
negative impacts of Obamacare.''
The largest recipient of Freedom Partners cash--about $115
million--was the Center to Protect Patient Rights, according
to the groups' latest tax filings. Run by a political
consultant with ties to the Kochs and listing an Arizona post
office box for its address, the center appears to be little
more than a clearinghouse for donations to still more groups,
including American Commitment and the 60 Plus Association,
both ardent foes of the health care law.
American Commitment and 60 Plus were among a handful of
groups calling themselves the ``Repeal Coalition'' that sent
a letter in August urging Republican leaders in the House and
the Senate to insist ``at a minimum'' in a one-year delay of
carrying out the health care law as part of any budget deal.
Another group, the Conservative 50 Plus Alliance, delivered a
defunding petition with 68,700 signatures to the Senate.
In the fight to shape public opinion, conservatives face
well-organized liberal foes. Enroll America, a nonprofit
group allied with the Obama White House, is waging a campaign
to persuade millions of the uninsured to buy coverage. The
law's supporters
[[Page S7255]]
are also getting huge assistance from the insurance industry,
which is expected to spend $1 billion on advertising to help
sell its plans on the exchanges.
``It is David versus Goliath,'' said Mr. Phillips of
Americans for Prosperity.
But conservatives are finding that with relatively small
advertising buys, they can make a splash. Generation
Opportunity, the youth-oriented outfit behind the ``Creepy
Uncle Sam'' ads, is spending $750,000 on that effort, aimed
at dissuading young people--a cohort critical to the success
of the health care overhaul--from signing up for insurance
under the new law.
The group receives substantial backing from Freedom
Partners and appears ready to expand. Recently, Generation
Opportunity moved into spacious new offices in Arlington,
Va., where exposed ductwork, Ikea chairs and a Ping-Pong
table give off the feel of a Silicon Valley start-up.
Its executive director, Evan Feinberg, a 29-year-old former
Capitol Hill aide and onetime instructor for a leadership
institute founded by Charles Koch, said there would be more
Uncle Sam ads, coupled with college campus visits, this fall.
Two other groups, FreedomWorks, with its ``Burn Your
Obamacare Card'' protests, and Young Americans for Liberty,
are also running campus events.
``A lot of folks have asked us, `Are we trying to sabotage
the law?' '' Mr. Feinberg said in an interview last week. His
answer echoes the Freedom Partners philosophy: ``Our goal is
to educate and empower young people.''
Critical Timing
But many on the Republican right wanted to do more.
Mr. Meese's low-profile coalition, the Conservative Action
Project, which seeks to find common ground among leaders of
an array of fiscally and socially conservative groups, was
looking ahead to last Tuesday, when the new online health
insurance marketplaces, called exchanges, were set to open.
If the law took full effect as planned, many conservatives
feared, it would be nearly impossible to repeal--even if a
Republican president were elected in 2016.
``I think people realized that with the imminent beginning
of Obamacare, that this was a critical time to make every
effort to stop something,'' Mr. Meese said in an interview.
(He has since stepped down as the coalition's chairman and
has been succeeded by David McIntosh, a former congressman
from Indiana.)
The defunding idea, Mr. Meese said, was ``a logical
strategy.'' The idea drew broad support. Fiscal conservatives
like Chris Chocola, the president of the Club for Growth,
signed on to the blueprint. So did social and religious
conservatives, like the Rev. Lou Sheldon of the Traditional
Values Coalition.
The document set a target date: March 27, when a continuing
resolution allowing the government to function was to expire.
Its message was direct: ``Conservatives should not approve a
C.R. unless it defunds Obamacare.''
But the March date came and went without a defunding
struggle. In the Senate, Mr. Cruz and Senator Mike Lee, a
Utah Republican, talked up the defunding idea, but it went
nowhere in the Democratic-controlled chamber. In the House,
Mr. Boehner wanted to concentrate instead on locking in the
across-the-board budget cuts known as sequestration, and Tea
Party lawmakers followed his lead. Outside advocates were
unhappy but held their fire.
``We didn't cause any trouble,'' Mr. Chocola said.
Yet by summer, with an August recess looming and another
temporary spending bill expiring at the end of September, the
groups were done waiting.
``I remember talking to reporters at the end of July, and
they said, `This didn't go anywhere,' '' Mr. Needham
recalled. ``What all of us felt at the time was, this was
never going to be a strategy that was going to win inside the
Beltway. It was going to be a strategy where, during August,
people would go home and hear from their constituents,
saying: `You pledged to do everything you could to stop
Obamacare. Will you defund it?' ''
Heritage Action, which has trained 6,000 people it calls
sentinels around the country, sent them to open meetings and
other events to confront their elected representatives. Its
``Defund Obamacare Town Hall Tour,'' which began in
Fayetteville, Ark., on Aug. 19 and ended 10 days later in
Wilmington, Del., drew hundreds at every stop.
The Senate Conservatives Fund, led by Mr. DeMint when he
was in the Senate, put up a Web site in July called
dontfundobama
care.com and ran television ads featuring Mr. Cruz and Mr.
Lee urging people to tell their representatives not to fund
the law.
When Senator Richard M. Burr, a North Carolina Republican,
told a reporter that defunding the law was ``the dumbest idea
I've ever heard,'' the fund bought a radio ad to attack him.
Two other Republican senators up for re-election in 2014,
Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and Lindsey Graham of South
Carolina, were also targeted. Both face Tea Party
challengers.
In Washington, Tea Party Patriots, which created the
defunding tool kit, set up a Web site, exemptamerica.com, to
promote a rally last month showcasing many of the Republicans
in Congress whom Democrats--and a number of fellow
Republicans--say are most responsible for the shutdown.
While conservatives believe that the public will back them
on defunding, a recent poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation
found that a majority--57 percent--disapproves of cutting off
funding as a way to stop the law.
Last week, with the health care exchanges open for business
and a number of prominent Republicans complaining that the
``Defund Obamacare'' strategy was politically damaging and
pointless, Mr. Needham of Heritage Action said he felt good
about what the groups had accomplished.
``It really was a groundswell,'' he said, ``that changed
Washington from the outside in.''
Mr. SANDERS. I thank the Presiding Officer.
Let me quote from the yesterday's New York Times:
The current budget brinkmanship is just the latest
development in a well-financed, broadbased assault on the
health law, Mr. Obama's signature legislative initiative.
Groups like Tea Party Patriots, Americans for Prosperity, and
FreedomWorks are all immersed in the fight, as is Club for
Growth, a business-backed nonprofit organization. Some, like
Generation Opportunity and Young Americans for Liberty, both
aimed at young adults, are upstarts. Heritage Action is new,
too, founded in 2010 to advance the policy prescriptions of
its sister group, the Heritage Foundation.
The billionaire Koch brothers, Charles and David, have been
deeply involved with financing the overall effort.
Let me repeat that.
The billionaire Koch brothers, Charles and David, have been
deeply involved with financing the overall effort.
Remember, these are the guys who are worth $70 billion, who want to
essentially repeal every major piece of legislation protecting working
families over the last 80 years.
Let me go back to the article:
A group linked to the Kochs, Freedom Partners Chamber of
Commerce, disbursed more than $200 million last year--
$200 million last year.
to nonprofit organizations involved in the fight.
Et cetera, et cetera.
Now I will go to another paragraph, which is really interesting and
really important:
The groups have also sought to pressure vulnerable
Republican members of Congress with scorecards keeping track
of their health care votes; have burned faux ``Obamacare
cards'' on college campuses; and have distributed scripts for
phone calls to Congressional offices, sample letters to
editors and Twitter and Facebook offerings for followers to
present as their own.
What is going on here? What does that mean? This is what it means. As
a result of the disastrous Supreme Court ruling called Citizens United,
what billionaires such as the Koch brothers and others can do--and what
they are doing today--is to say to Republicans in the House of
Representatives: If you vote for a clean continuing resolution, if you
vote to keep the government open, if you make it very clear that you
will oppose any effort to see the U.S. default on its debts--if you do
that, let me tell you what is going to happen to you, because we have
the Koch brothers and people worth billions of dollars who are prepared
to jump into your campaign, perhaps get a primary opponent to run
against you, and to fund that opponent with as much money as he or she
needs.
So now, what democracy in the House--as a result of Citizens United--
is about is that a handful of billionaires can threaten any Member of
the House with defeat by pouring in unlimited sums of money if they
vote in a way that the Koch brothers do not like.
If that is how people think American democracy is supposed to
function, it would surprise me very much. But that is not what American
democracy is supposed to be about. That tells me again why we have to
do everything we can to overturn this disastrous Citizens United
Supreme Court decision so that a handful of billionaires cannot dictate
public policy here in the United States of America and in the Congress.
Let me just conclude by saying this: The American people are angry
and they are frustrated, and I think what they are seeing is that the
middle class of this country is disappearing. In fact, in the last 24
years median family income today is lower than it was. It has gone
down. You have millions of people who are out there working for wages
they just cannot raise a family on. You are seeing right now a growth
in poverty among elderly people. In the midst of a disappearing middle
class and the increase of poverty, you are seeing more income and
wealth inequality in this country than we have seen since
[[Page S7256]]
the 1920s. The gap between the very rich and everybody else grows
wider. And now, as I mentioned a moment ago, what billionaires are
doing with their money is continuing their war against the middle class
by trying to repeal important pieces of legislation.
What the American people are saying is: What about us? What about us?
Who is worried that my kid who graduated from high school cannot find a
job? Who is worried that my other kid who graduated college is leaving
school deeply in debt? Who is worried that in our country we are not
being aggressive in dealing with the issue of global warming?
There are enormous issues facing the middle class in this country:
the need to create millions of jobs, the need to raise the minimum
wage, the need to make college affordable, the need to significantly
improve childcare in this country and education in general.
There is an enormous amount of work to be done. What this Congress
should not be doing is telling 2 million workers that you are not
getting paid, furloughing what was then 800,000, now 400,000 workers.
That is not what we should be doing.
I hope the American people stand and make it clear to our Republican
friends that they cannot shut down the government because they are not
getting their way. I hope the American people would do everything they
can to demand that this Congress start doing its job, which is to
represent working families.
With that, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I rise today with a pretty simple message
for House leadership: You can end this Republican shutdown today. Just
simply let the House vote.
On issue after issue after issue, when the House has acted, the
Senate has responded with a vote, either with a vote for or against a
tabling motion or a vote for or against legislation, but we have taken
a vote. We simply ask the House to do the same.
By scheduling a vote on the Senate-passed plan--the continuing
resolution--Speaker Boehner can ensure that more than 800,000 workers,
including tens of thousands in my home State of Ohio, can get back to
work.
By scheduling a vote on the Senate-passed bill, he can reopen the
government without rehashing old political fights; then get down to
business--deal with the debt limit--then get down to business and make
decisions about immigration, make decisions about jobs, make decisions
about what we are going to do with the budget.
I do not think we have ever, Mr. Speaker, seen one faction of one
party of one chamber of one branch of government hold the entire
country and economic recovery of our Nation hostage--a faction of one
party of one house of one branch of government hold the country
hostage.
Do not take my word for it. A Cleveland Plain Dealer headline said:
``Republicans need to quit the attack on Obamacare and agree to a clean
continuing resolution.'' They called the actions of the far right
attack on the 3-year-old health care law--the health care law that was
passed overwhelmingly in both Houses, with 60 votes in the Senate and
well over a majority in the House, affirmed in part by the Supreme
Court--the Plain Dealer called the actions attacking the health care
law ``bordering on the un-American.''
The Toledo Blade called the actions of the far right in the House
``GOP extortion,'' challenging Speaker Boehner to put America's economy
over his own job, reminding him of his election night saying the 2012
election ``changes that,'' making the health law ``the law of the
land.''
Finally, the Washington Post--no stranger to criticizing Democrats--
called out the ``House of Embarrassment'' and its ``heedlessness'' on
the impact of its actions on ordinary Americans.
I was home this weekend, and I spoke with all kinds of people. I
spoke with Federal employees, some of whom have been furloughed, some
of whom have not. I spoke with others in Avon Lake, OH, other places. I
listened to what they had to say. People are frustrated. They cannot
believe that, again, one group of radicals in one House of one branch
of government can, for all intents and purposes, shut the country down
and move us towards the precipice of what happens if the Congress does
not pay the bills that we as a Congress ran up. These are real people
facing a real and devastating impact.
I did something else that I know the Acting President pro tempore, as
a Senator from Maine, a former Governor, does also: get on the phone
and just talk to people in your State about the impact this will have.
I spoke to one of the leaders of an institution in Ohio that has a
large R&D presence in the State. He talked about the irreparable damage
to our infrastructure, similar to what happens in Senator Nelson's
State--who just joined me on the floor--what could happen at NASA in
South Florida, what happens at NASA in Cleveland, what happens at
Batelle in Columbus, what happens at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in
Dayton.
This leader at one of these institutions--I do not want to call him
out by name--he talked about the irreparable damage to our
infrastructure as a nation. This is not just highways and bridges. This
is scientific researchers, this is engineers, this is people working on
some of the most top secret issues in our country and our government.
He went on to say it is asymmetric: building and killing a scientific
endeavor. Think about that. Killing a scientific endeavor you can do in
a week or you can do in a month simply by stopping the research by an
interruption like this, where many of the top scientists, the top
engineers, at some point just say: I do not want to go through this
again. I am not going to continue to do this important work for my
country and then see it shut down because somebody has a political ax
to grind, because somebody, on a continuing resolution, or one
political party, as we approach the debt ceiling, wants to attach their
political platform to one of these important pieces of legislation just
to make the government run.
What is happening in places like that is some of these engineers say:
I am not sure I want to work for NASA anymore. I am not sure I want to
stay in the military. I am not sure I want to be at a major research
institution like Batelle. I can go elsewhere where my work will not get
interrupted and people will show their appreciation simply by
continuing to fund my research.
When you think about this building and killing a scientific endeavor,
it is a little bit like one old politician said, that it takes a
carpenter a long time to build a barn, but any--I am not sure he used
the word ``mule''--but any mule can knock down that barn in a day or
so.
I remember I was in a car accident years ago. I broke my back. I was
in the hospital for a week. For 3 days I stayed in bed. I remember the
first time I tried to walk how my muscles had atrophied. It took
several weeks before I was back to full strength and could rebuild that
muscle.
That is really the way it is with these research institutions in our
country, which we have so many of, that are so important, whether it is
NASA, whether it is Batelle, whether it is Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, whether it is the National Institutes of Health. We have
assembled some of the greatest scientists and engineers and technicians
in the world at these institutions, but building a scientific endeavor
takes days and weeks and months and years; killing one is a matter of
an interruption of 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 weeks.
That is why this is so dangerous, this shut down. That is why going
up against the debt ceiling is potentially catastrophic for our
country. It makes no sense. It is not good for our economy. It is not
good for our people. It is not good for our Federal workforce that
really can do the right kinds of things for our country.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question?
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I would be glad to yield to the Senator
from Florida.
Mr. NELSON. What the Senator said about NASA is so true. Would the
Senator believe that 97 percent of the
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workforce at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is on
furlough? A few of us had to intercede. The Mars mission that is
supposed to go in a narrow window between mid-November and early
December--if they miss that window, it would be another 2 years before
they could launch that Mars mission and, therefore, you would have all
the expense of keeping the scientists on, and so forth. We finally got
them to bring them back so they could continue processing the mission
so it can launch in that narrow 3-week window. But the rest of the
people are gone.
Does that sound very intelligent to the Senator from Ohio?
Mr. BROWN. I would add, it is interesting: Three of the great NASA
facilities are represented on the floor now by Senator Cornyn from
Texas, Senator Nelson, and me. It is not just NASA employees at NASA
Glenn in Cleveland.
Mr. NELSON. Correct.
Mr. BROWN. It is another 1,300 contractors who are doing work paid by
taxpayers. They are actually private companies, as the Senator knows.
It is the same in Florida, the same in Texas. And their work is
important too.
I just think these kinds of interruptions are so senseless. What I
heard more than anything from people when I was home was how senseless
this is, how ludicrous this is.
I spoke to hospital administrators all over my State today. I was on
the phone with a number of them from Williams County in the northwest
corner of the State, to Columbus, to Cleveland, to all over, and it is
senseless to them that they are in the midst of maybe a hospital
expansion or maybe just doing the day-to-day work of the hospital, and
they do not know what to think.
I have heard many of my colleagues here for years talk about the
unpredictability of this economy and that it is partly because of
Washington and ObamaCare or maybe Dodd-Frank: We do not know what is
happening next.
The worst kind of unpredictability is shutting the government down or
leading us right up to the debt ceiling. That is why it is so important
that the House vote and then we get serious about doing the debt
ceiling vote and then we move on to issues such as immigration and
others that matter for our country.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I agree with our colleagues that a
government shutdown is not the best way to do business around here. We
should get together--the President, the House, and the Senate--and we
should work this out, both the continuing resolution and the debt
ceiling, of which Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew has said he will
basically run out of all of the extraordinary measures he can use to
avoid us reaching the debt ceiling--which, colloquially speaking, I
would say is the equivalent of maxing out your credit card, the Federal
Government's credit card.
But it is worth remembering that as James Baker, former Secretary of
the Treasury, Secretary of State, with a distinguished record of public
service going back many years--he recently noted in an article in the
Wall Street Journal that since 1976 we have had 17 government shutdowns
temporarily until differences between the parties, between the branches
could be worked out. I hope we can do that sooner rather than later.
The truth is that there was a way out with regard to the shutdown,
particularly when the House passed a piece of legislation that would
maintain the spending limits at $988 billion, which was the same level
the Senate majority had chosen, but it also attached two other
provisions to it, one of which would have eliminated the carve-out for
Congress for ObamaCare--in other words, the carve-out that treats
Congress differently than the rest of the country. Our Democratic
friends unfortunately voted against that provision. All Republicans
voted to eliminate that carve-out.
The second was the delay in the penalties that would be applied to
individuals who do not buy government-approved health insurance under
ObamaCare. The President has unilaterally delayed for 1 year the
penalties for employers who do not meet the requirements of ObamaCare.
All we were asking is that the same consideration be given to hard-
working Americans. If our friends across the aisle--or at least enough
of them--had joined with us to vote for both of those provisions that
came over with the House bill, the government would not be shut down,
it would be operating. But that was the decision they made. I think
they made a mistake.
But we know the government shutdown debate is now quickly becoming a
debate over the broader subject of what we do about spending and debt,
particularly what we do with regard to the debt ceiling I mentioned
earlier. We have reached almost the top of our credit limit on the
Nation's credit card, and President Obama is asking for another
trillion dollars in spending, in debt limit. But the President differs
from many of us in that he thinks this debt ceiling cap ought to be
lifted by another trillion dollars without anything else attached to
it. He thinks it ought to be automatic, even though we believe it is
entirely appropriate--and the majority of times in the past, the debt
ceiling increase has been accompanied by other long-term policy
reforms. The President himself has agreed to these kinds of reforms in
the past. But apparently this time he has drawn a line in the sand.
So now he believes, unlike the past, that Congress should act like a
rubberstamp when it comes to raising the limit on America's credit
card, our debt limit. Meanwhile, it seems our friends across the aisle
also feel the House should be a rubberstamp for the Senate. All of this
leads me to conclude that James Madison, the father of the
Constitution, must be rolling over in his grave because he and others
of the Founders were the geniuses who decided that it was the checks
and balances from separated government--the executive and the
legislative, the House and the Senate--that would best protect our
freedoms and best prevent overreach by other branches.
But in a way I can understand why the President and the majority
leader are refusing to negotiate and are saying ``it is my way or the
highway.'' After all, the last time we had these kinds of major fiscal
talks in advance of a debt ceiling deadline, the result was the Budget
Control Act. That was 2011. That law produced, by default, real
spending cuts and real deficit reduction. If you recall, that was where
the supercommittee was created to try to negotiate a grand bargain. The
supercommittee was unsuccessful, and the default was the Budget Control
Act and the sequester, which automatically cut discretionary spending.
Our friends across the aisle clearly think that was a big mistake. The
President and the majority leader now are refusing to negotiate at all
on the debt ceiling. They believe it ought to be rubberstamped.
Well, amidst all of the rhetoric and the finger-pointing, now
Washington has erupted into something it does best, which is the blame
game. I am afraid we have lost sight of our underlying debt problem.
Despite the short-term deficit reduction we have witnessed since 2011
due to the default position of the Budget Control Act, our long-term
fiscal trajectory remains unsustainable. Last month the Congressional
Budget Office projected that publicly held Federal debt is on course to
exceed the size of our entire economy. By that point, again, under
current law, the interest we have to pay to China and other foreign
creditors that hold more than half of our debt will be 2\1/2\ times
greater than the 40-year average. We know interest rates are
extraordinarily and abnormally low because of the policies of the
Federal Reserve. But can you imagine, for that $17 trillion in debt on
which the U.S. Government would have to pay historic averages of
interest to our creditors in order to get them to buy our debt, what
impact that would have? Well, I will talk about that more in a moment.
If we continue down this road without adopting real reforms for our
long-term fiscal challenges, we will condemn our children and our
grandchildren to fewer jobs, slower economic growth, worse opportunity,
and a much greater risk of a full-blown fiscal crisis.
In the event of a crisis, our safety net programs that we all care
about for the most vulnerable in our country would be cut harshly and
abruptly, as would
[[Page S7258]]
our ability to fund national security and other priorities.
Nobody wants that kind of a future. Nobody has to accept that kind of
a future if we just do our job--not the President trying to go it alone
again, not the Senate saying ``it is my way or the highway'' to the
House, but by the House and the Senate and the White House working
together to try to work our way through it.
But if we continue to rack up debt--another trillion is what the
President wants to raise the debt limit--and if we continue to postpone
the hard choices and leave it to others, we will move closer and closer
to an eventual disaster. By contrast, if we were to take the
responsibility now to reform our safety net programs, we could reform
them gradually so that people would barely feel it. That will make it
much easier to protect the Americans who need these programs the most--
our seniors and the most vulnerable in our society.
Of course, we cannot make any real progress as long as the President
and the majority leader in the Senate refuse to negotiate. As I said
earlier, Congress is not a rubberstamp. That is not the Constitution
written by our Founders. The House of Representatives is not a
rubberstamp for the Senate. We have been willing to compromise and
negotiate. As a matter of fact, the House has sent over multiple bills.
Every time a Member of the opposing party comes to the floor and talks
about the National Institutes of Health's funding being cut off for
children's cancer research, we have come down here and said: Well,
let's pass the bill. Let's pass that appropriation.
When someone has said: Well, what about the veterans' disability
claims that are stacking up and are not being processed as a result of
the shutdown, the House has passed legislation. We have come to the
floor and offered legislation that would allow us to address that
problem, but we have been told no time and time again.
I ask unanimous consent for 4 additional minutes.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, we need to work together. That is the only
way this is going to happen. We know it will happen. It is going to
happen. The President cannot take the unsustainable position that ``it
is my way or the highway and I will not negotiate,'' especially since
he has done it before, especially since that is the only way our
constitutional framework allows the resolution of problems. If we were
to do--which we are not going to do--what the President and the
majority leader have asked us to do, which is to raise the debt limit
automatically without dealing with any of our long-term fiscal
problems, we would simply be encouraging Congress and our policymakers
to delay the tough choices and hard votes. We would be encouraging--
indeed, we would be enabling--this type of fiscal profligacy that has
left us with a gross national debt of $17 trillion, which is about
$53,000 for every man, woman, and child in America.
More than $6 trillion of debt has been added since President Obama
became President of the United States. Yet the President seems to show
absolutely no sense of urgency in dealing with it. That is despite his
own fiscal commission, the Simpson-Bowles Commission, coming back in
December 2010--that was a bipartisan commission he himself appointed--
they came back with their own policy prescription to deal with this
problem. Republicans, some of our most conservative Members, and some
of the most liberal Members on the other side of the aisle came
together and they voted for the Simpson-Bowles Commission report in
December 2010, but the President simply walked away from it.
Back in March, he told ABC News:
We do not have an immediate crisis in terms of debt. In
fact, for the next 10 years, it is going to be in a
sustainable place.
That is what the President of the United States said last March. But
that is not what his own bipartisan fiscal commission said in December
2010. That is not what the Congressional Budget Office says. As
everybody around here knows, the Congressional Budget Office is the
final authority on these matters. In their 2013 long-term budget
outlook, on page 13, they have a couple of pages that I ask unanimous
consent to have printed in the Record following my remarks.
It is entitled ``Consequences of Large and Growing Federal Debt.''
They did not say: We do not have an immediate crisis in terms of debt,
and we are pretty much in a sustainable place for 10 years.
They said:
The high and rising amounts of Federal debt held by the
public that CBO projects for the coming decades under the
extended baseline would have significant negative
consequences for both the economy and the federal budget.
What were those? They said there would be less national savings and
less future income. They said there would be pressure for larger tax
increases and spending cuts to deal with this, particularly the
phenomena of high interest payments that I mentioned a moment ago.
Again, because of the Federal Reserve's policies, it costs next to
nothing for the Federal Government in terms of interest on our national
debt, but when that goes back up to historic averages, to 4, 5 percent,
it is going to cost trillions of dollars more for us to service the
existing debt, not to mention the additional trillion the President
wants to borrow.
What is that going to do? Well, that is going to crowd out other
priorities such as NASA, which my colleague from Florida and I both
think is an important national priority. I heard the Senator from Ohio
say the same. But higher interest payments as a result of not dealing
with this high debt are going to crowd out other important national
priorities.
Finally, the Congressional Budget Office said there is a ``greater
chance of a fiscal crisis.'' Specifically, what they are talking about
is that as we pay more and more for interest on our national debt, we
lose more and more control over our fiscal future. As we all know on a
bipartisan basis, we have been told time and time again by the experts
that when our creditors lose confidence in our ability to repay debt,
there can come a breaking moment when all of a sudden we lose control
and all of these things happen, which we can avoid if we deal
responsibly today.
In other words, the President seems content to let one of his
successors deal with the problem of our rising national debt--that is
only, I would add, if we get lucky enough to postpone the kinds of
crises and problems CBO and Simpson-Bowles project that long. The
President obviously has other priorities, but I want to remind him what
his own former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, ADM Mike Mullen,
said when he was asked about the Nation's biggest threat to our
national security.
He said it was the national debt. The President himself has echoed
those comments, but the President is still sitting on the sidelines and
still takes the untenable position that he is unwilling to negotiate.
At a time when the country needs genuine leadership, he is nowhere to
be found.
Until that changes, we are not going to get any closer to where we
need to be sooner, rather than later, and that is a true bipartisan
compromise.
I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record the article:
``Consequences of Large and Growing Federal Debt.''
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the 2013 Long-Term Budget Outlook, Sept. 2013]
Consequences of Large and Growing Federal Debt
The high and rising amounts of federal debt held by the
public that CBO projects for coming decades under the
extended baseline would have significant negative
consequences for both the economy and the federal budget.
Those consequences include reducing the total amounts of
national saving and income; increasing the government's
interest payments, thereby putting more pressure on the rest
of the budget; limiting lawmakers' flexibility to respond to
unexpected events; and increasing the likelihood of a fiscal
crisis.
Less National Saving and Future Income
Large federal budget deficits over the long term would
reduce investment, resulting in lower national income and
higher interest rates than would otherwise occur. The reason
is that increased government borrowing would cause a larger
share of the savings potentially available for investment to
be used for purchasing government securities, such as
Treasury bonds. Those purchases would ``crowd out''
investment in capital goods,
[[Page S7259]]
such as factories and computers, which make workers more
productive. Because wages are determined mainly by workers'
productivity, the reduction in investment would also reduce
wages, lessening people's incentive to work. In addition,
both private borrowers and the government would have to pay
higher interest rates to compete for savings, and those
higher rates would strengthen people's incentive to save.
However, the rise in private saving would be a good deal
smaller than the increase in federal borrowing represented by
the change in the deficit, so national saving would decline,
as would private investment. (For a detailed analysis of
those economic effects, see Chapter 6.)
In the short run, though, large federal budget deficits
would tend to boost demand, thus increasing output and
employment relative to what they would be with smaller
deficits. That is especially the case under conditions like
those now prevailing in the United States--with substantial
unemployment and underused factories, offices, and
equipment--which have led the Federal Reserve to push short-
term interest rates down almost to zero. The effects of the
higher demand would be temporary because stabilizing forces
in the economy tend to move output back toward its potential
level. Those forces include the response of prices and
interest rates to higher demand, as well as (in normal times)
actions by the Federal Reserve.
Pressure for Larger Tax Increases or Spending Cuts in the Future
Large amounts of federal debt ordinarily require the
government to make large interest payments to its lenders,
and growth in the debt causes those interest payments to
increase. (Net interest payments are currently fairly small
relative to the size of the federal budget because interest
rates are exceptionally low, but CBO projects that those
payments will increase considerably as rates return to more
normal levels.)
Higher interest payments would consume a larger portion of
federal revenues, resulting in a larger gap between the
remaining revenues and the amount that would be spent on
federal programs under current law. Hence, if lawmakers
wanted to maintain the benefits and services that the
government is scheduled to provide under current law, while
not allowing deficits to increase as interest payments grew,
revenues would have to rise as well. Additional revenues
could be raised in many different ways, but to the extent
that they were generated by boosting marginal tax rates (the
rates on an additional dollar of income), the higher tax
rates would discourage people from working and saving,
further reducing output and income. Alternatively, lawmakers
could choose to offset rising interest costs, at least in
part, by reducing benefits and services. Those reductions
could be made in many ways, but to the extent that they came
from cutting federal investments, future output and income
would also be reduced. As another option, lawmakers could
respond to higher interest payments by allowing deficits to
increase for some time, but that approach would require
greater deficit reduction later if lawmakers wanted to avoid
a long-term increase in debt relative to GDP.
Reduced Ability to Respond to Domestic and International Problems
Having a relatively small amount of outstanding debt gives
a government the ability to borrow funds to address
significant unexpected events, such as recessions, financial
crises, and wars. In contrast, having a large amount of debt
leaves a government with less flexibility to address
financial and economic crises, which in many countries have
been very costly. A large amount of debt could also harm a
country's national security by constraining military spending
in times of crisis or limiting the country's ability to
prepare for such a crisis.
A few years ago, the size of the U.S. federal debt gave the
government the flexibility to respond to the financial crisis
and severe recession by increasing spending and cutting taxes
to stimulate economic activity, providing public funding to
stabilize the financial sector, and continuing to pay for
other programs even as tax revenues dropped sharply because
of the decline in output and income. If federal debt stayed
at its current percentage of GDP or grew further, the
government would find it more difficult to undertake similar
policies in the future. As a result, future recessions and
financial crises could have larger negative effects on the
economy and on people's well-being. Moreover, the reduced
financial flexibility and increased dependence on foreign
investors that would accompany a rise in debt could weaken
the United States' international leadership.
Greater Chance of a Fiscal Crisis
A large and continually growing federal debt would have
another significant negative consequence: It would increase
the probability of a fiscal crisis for the United States. In
such a crisis, investors become unwilling to finance all of a
government's borrowing needs unless they are compensated with
very high interest rates; as a result, the interest rates on
government debt rise suddenly and sharply relative to rates
of return on other assets. That increase in interest rates
reduces the market value of outstanding government bonds,
causing losses for investors who hold them. Such a decline
can precipitate a broader financial crisis by creating losses
for mutual funds, pension funds, insurance companies, banks,
and other holders of government debt--losses that may be
large enough to cause some financial institutions to fail.
Unfortunately, there is no way to predict with any
confidence whether or when such a fiscal crisis might occur
in the United States. In particular, there is no identifiable
tipping point of debt relative to GDP that indicates that a
crisis is likely or imminent. All else being equal, however,
the larger a government's debt, the greater the risk of a
fiscal crisis.
The likelihood of such a crisis also depends on the
economic environment, both domestic and international. If
investors expect continued economic growth, they are
generally less concerned about debt burdens; conversely, high
debt can reinforce more general concern about an economy. In
many cases around the world, fiscal crises have begun during
recessions and, in turn, have exacerbated them. In some
instances, a crisis has been triggered by news that a
government would, for any number of reasons, need to borrow
an unexpectedly large amount of money. Then, as investors
lost confidence and interest rates spiked, borrowing became
more difficult and expensive for the government. That
development forced policymakers to either cut spending and
increase taxes immediately and substantially to reassure
investors, or renege on the terms of the country's existing
debt, or increase the supply of money and boost inflation. In
some cases, a fiscal crisis also made borrowing more
expensive for private-sector borrowers because uncertainty
about the government's response to the crisis reduced
confidence in the viability of private-sector enterprises.
Higher private-sector interest rates, combined with
reductions in government spending and increases in taxes,
have tended to worsen economic conditions in the short term.
If a fiscal crisis occurred in the United States,
policymakers would have only limited--and unattractive--
options for responding to it. In particular, the government
would need to undertake some combination of three approaches:
restructuring its debt (that is, seeking to modify the
contractual terms of its existing obligations), pursuing
inflationary monetary policy, and adopting an austerity
program of spending cuts and tax increases. Thus, such a
crisis would confront policymakers with extremely difficult
choices and probably have a very significant negative impact
on the country.
Mr. CORNYN. I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Florida.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, before the Chair is yielded, I wish to say
it is almost like deja vu all over again. The great Senator from Maine
was sitting in the chair only a few days ago when this Senator had a
chance to make comments. Here we are again.
I wish to say to the Senator from Texas, as he is leaving the
Chamber, that I think the Senator is a good Senator who believes
strongly in what he is saying, but if there is a will, there is a way.
Reasonable people can come together and work through to a reasonable
conclusion.
I was going to say, with the Senator from Texas on the floor, the
Senator had a chance to express his opinion. Indeed, the Senator did
with his vote when we passed the appropriations bill, now called the
continuing resolution, because we have not brought each of the
appropriations bills to the floor.
We accepted it at the House number. The senior Senator from Texas
expressed his opinion by means of his ``no'' vote, but ``yes'' votes
won, and we sent it to the other body to keep the government open.
Indeed, the government is not open.
I go back to 2 days ago when the Senator from Maine was the Presiding
Officer and here we are again. If we would remember the Golden Rule put
in the old English: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you
or put into modern street language: Treat others as you want to be
treated--in other words, recognize that the other fellow has a point of
view and you have to respect his point of view--even though his point
of view may be different from yours--the genius of American democracy
is hammering out those differences and building consensus in a civil
way and achieving a workable solution. What we have here is
brinkmanship.
We hammered it out, we passed appropriations, a continuing
resolution. We sent it to the House of Representatives, and they will
not put it up for a vote because they are only--and this is operative--
going to pass this with Republican votes.
What does that do? This takes an outsized minority of the Republican
caucus being the tail that is wagging the Republican dog in the House
of Representatives. If they only pass it with Republican votes instead
of the will of the whole House then, in fact, we will have what we have
now, a small out-of-the-mainstream political philosophy extremist group
dictating what
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they want and only what they want. It is their way or no way. That is
not treating others as they wish to be treated. This is an attitude of
saying: I know better than you and my way is going to be the only way.
That is not how we govern this country. That is not how we honor and
respect other people's points of view that may be different from ours.
I do not wish to hold up the Senator from Maine, but I wanted to
follow up on the conversation I had through the Chair 2 days ago. All
of these high-minded, highfalutin ideas of all of us getting together
and treating each other as we wish to be treated and hammering out this
policy--lo and behold, maybe everything I am saying doesn't have a
thing to do with this by virtue of an investigative piece having been
done by the New York Times over the weekend. I wish to read the first
three paragraphs of this investigative piece. It is entitled: ``A
Federal Budget Crisis Months in the Planning'' by Sheryl Gay Stolberg
and Mike McIntire.
Shortly after President Obama started his second term, a
loose-knit coalition of conservative activists led by former
Attorney General Edwin Meese III gathered in the capital to
plot strategy. Their push to repeal Mr. Obama's health care
law was going nowhere, and they desperately needed a new
plan.
Out of that session, held one morning in a location the
members insist on keeping secret, came a little-noticed
``blueprint to defunding Obamacare,'' signed by Mr. Meese and
leaders of more than three dozen conservative groups.
It articulated a take-no-prisoners legislative strategy
that has long percolated in conservative circles: that
Republicans could derail the health care overhaul if
conservative lawmakers were willing to push fellow
Republicans--including their cautious leaders--into cutting
off financing for the entire federal government.
This is only the first three paragraphs. If that is true, then all of
these high-minded ideas of the Golden Rule and treating each other with
respect and working out your differences is all out the window.
If that is true--and it looks as if it is by virtue of what we see
going on down in the other end of this Capitol Building, a small group
of people are not going to do anything to open the government unless
they get their way to defund the Affordable Care Act, the health care
reform act--I would suggest that if that is the case, then the people
who are suffering should sit up and take notice of what is happening to
their government.
We have heard examples over and over. Senator Brown and I were just
talking about the 97 percent of people who are laid off in NASA. Then
what do we do with all of the civilian workforce in NASA? Think of what
this is doing to all of the contractors who work for NASA.
We have heard also the statistic out here that over 70 percent of the
intelligence community has been furloughed. We have heard that Head
Start, the federally funded program to get children ready to start the
public schools, kindergarten and first grade, is shutting down.
We know last week, when we were in the middle of this shutdown, there
was a storm brewing in the Gulf of Mexico. Thank the good Lord it
fizzled out, but at one point it was expected to turn into a Category 1
hurricane hitting the gulf coast. Had that happened, FEMA had been laid
off--although they reached back and started the National Guard, et
cetera. Thank you to Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel for finding an
unintended consequence in the law that was passed to pay the U.S.
military while the government is shut down because he found a little
hook in there.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent for 2 additional
minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. NELSON. He found a hook in there so he could then extend that to
most of the civilian workforce, including some of the National Guard,
but we didn't know that.
In my State of Florida, 156 employees were getting the notices just
in the National Guard on Friday. There were already 1,000 military
technicians that had been furloughed in the National Guard, and we had
an inbound storm.
What about the programs in our State to help veterans find jobs? If
we are not done with this shutdown at the end of October, that is gone.
What about the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, a
part of the State government. Ten percent of their funds are Federal
funds. What about the Florida Department of Agriculture? Over 6 percent
of their workforce is federally funded.
What about--and we have heard this in the Senate--Women, Infants, and
Children? A society is supposed to take care of its very old and its
very young. This is why we have programs for Women, Infants, and
Children. Yet the supplemental nutrition program for women, for nursing
mothers, for children up to the age of 5, for breast-feeding support,
for nutrition education, and for health checkups is gone.
I could go on and on. Others have said it more articulately than I.
This is ridiculous. This shouldn't go on. As the drumbeat of the
crescendo continues, it will grow louder as we march toward October 17,
when the debt ceiling has to be raised so we don't go into default.
It is a sad day.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Kaine). The assistant majority leader.
____________________