[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 139 (Tuesday, October 8, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7281-S7282]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I rise to speak as the chair of the
Senate Appropriations Committee, who would like to reopen government
and have our committee get back to regular order to be able to move our
appropriations bills, to be able to debate them on the floor, amend
them on the floor, and go to conference to resolve either fiscal or
other issues we might have with the House. But we can't do it because
we are in lockdown politics.
There is much about where we find ourselves that is very frustrating
to me. One of the main ones is the fact that the tea party Republicans
are out there saying things that simply are not accurate. Tea party
Republicans say President Obama won't negotiate. That is not true. Tea
party Republicans are saying Democrats in the Senate won't negotiate.
That is not true. Tea party Republicans say the Senate has not moved
appropriations bills. That is not true. The Appropriation Committee
has. Tea party Republicans say the House doesn't have the votes to
reopen the government. That is not true. And tea party Republicans say
the debt limit is not a big deal. That is not true. So let me elaborate
on these point by point.
Tea party Republicans say President Obama won't negotiate. The
President has negotiated time and time again. He had a framework for a
grand bargain in his 2014 budget. Read it. Let the print speak for
itself. He had $1.8 trillion of deficit reduction over 10 years,
including $400 billion in health care savings, $200 billion in savings
from mandatory programs, $200 billion in further discretionary cuts in
strategic funding and discretionary spending. And, yes, he would even
change the cost-of-living calculation for Social Security. But the
Republicans couldn't take yes for an answer. Here was Obama, here was
his budget, here is what he was offering--to reduce debt, to take on
mandatory spending, to take on discretionary spending. They couldn't
take yes for an answer. It included items in there I didn't agree with,
but they were to be negotiated, to be discussed. Since he became
President, the deficit has gone down by 50 percent, from $1.4 trillion
in 2009 to an estimated $700 billion in 2013. High? Yes. But cut in
half.
Now let's go to this President who they say won't negotiate. He
negotiated in December of 2012 on a fiscal cliff deal. He wanted a 2-
year delay in sequester, but we got 2 months. He wanted tax cuts for
the wealthy to be eliminated above $250,000. He agreed to an estate tax
exemption. He wanted a $3.5 million exemption, the Republicans wanted
$5 million. He said OK. The 2-percent Social Security payroll tax was
ending without offsetting stimulus provisions. He gave and we supported
him. Now they say he won't negotiate.
Speaker Boehner says, we just want to have a conversation. That is
what the President did. What were those summits at Andrews Air Force
Base? I thought that was going to be kumbaya. The President has had
private one-on-one meetings, and nothing has come from that. Then he
did a larger charm offensive--he had dinner with Republicans both at
the White House and at different restaurants around town. Nobody seems
to be able to take yes for an answer. This is the President who has
invited people to the White House, invited leadership to play golf with
him to build relationships, he has had dinner there. But instead of
having lunch with the President, they want to have his lunch--over and
over again.
The President has expressed a willingness continually to negotiate.
And where are we now? We need to reopen the government. The House needs
to pass the Senate clean short-term CR and raise the debt limit. Once
it is open for business, we can talk about other matters.
Now let's go to tea party Republicans saying Democrats won't
negotiate. Senate Democrats have tried to negotiate on the budget since
we passed it on March 23. We were here for a marathon session led by
Senator Murray--vote after vote, amendment after amendment--and we
passed a budget resolution.
The rules of engagement and the rules for dispute resolution in the
Congress are, take what one body passes, like the Senate, and meet with
the House in a conference. Senator Murray was ready to go. She asked
permission--which she has to do under the rules of the Senate--to have
her budget conference to hammer out the budget with Paul Ryan and other
House Members.
Nineteen times since March 23 Senator Murray has stood on this floor
and asked for the ability to negotiate
[[Page S7282]]
with the House. Nineteen times she was blocked by six tea party
Republicans. Nineteen times, using the rules to protect the voice of
the minority--which I understand they used not only their voice but
what was used to protect them to prohibit the Senate from meeting with
their House counterparts.
So Senate Democrats want to negotiate. There is Paul Ryan. There is
Patty Murray. Let's have the budget conference and hammer it out. The
Democrats have been ready to negotiate on a budget since March 23,
2013.
Let's have a conversation? We have been trying to have that
conversation since March. Who has stopped us? Harry Reid didn't stop
Patty Murray. Chuck Schumer didn't stop the Budget Committee. Barbara
Mikulski is not stopping it. Six tea party Republicans have stopped the
ability of the Senate from going to the House to negotiate a budget.
Free the Budget Committee. Why is that so important? Because they not
only come up with an overall budget in discretionary spending,
mandatory spending, and revenues, but they put a cap on us
appropriators. One of the outcomes of a budget agreement is they set
the total amount of money the Appropriations Committee can spend on
discretionary spending. To the shock of everybody, there is actually a
cap on discretionary spending established by the Budget Committee. That
has been the rule of the Budget Act going back to the 1970s. I would
accept a cap agreed upon in a duly constituted process established by
the rules of the House and the Senate--which is, we pass a budget, we
meet in conference, we come back and give the appropriators what they
call the 302(a)--the total cap we can spend--we take a look at it, and
we meet and we follow the law. It also says what revenue should be and
then total mandatory spending.
So when we hear Democrats won't negotiate--the Democrats have
negotiated.
Going to this situation where we know the fiscal year expires October
1, the Senate put forth a bill. It came out of the Appropriations
Committee. It was really, as the Chair, at my suggestion we would have
a short-term funding resolution so we could deal with issues such as
debt limit, canceling sequester for 2 years, and what our funding as a
cap should be for 2014--short term, no new money, but a goal of getting
us to canceling the sequester, following what the Budget Committee
would set as the cap on us.
In order to get there, I was willing to compromise. I didn't want to.
I felt it was too harsh, too rough on important discretionary spending.
But sometimes you have to negotiate and compromise. So I was willing to
compromise in order to get to negotiations. What was the compromise?
The House has a level of $986 billion. It follows fiscal 2013 at the
sequester level, meaning reduced by over $100 billion. I thought that
$986 billion was too low. The Senate bill was $1.058 trillion. That is
over a $70 billion difference.
But that is what a conference is. That is what negotiation is. So in
order to get us across the dome into negotiations, I was willing to
compromise, particularly on very important domestic spending.
The liberals who want to fund Head Start, who want to fund NIH--well,
maybe we are not liberals. Maybe we are just Americans and, I believe,
friends on the other side of the aisle--we were ready to go. So in my
mind, as an appropriator, I have already compromised just to get us
into the room. But they won't even take up that bill. They won't take
up the bill that Speaker Boehner said he would pass if we agreed to
their number--$986 billion--to get us into the room to talk. If you
tell the Senate: If you agree with us on this, just to get a short-term
negotiation going, we will pass it, and then you don't, why should we
believe it will be any different?
But as the chairman of the Appropriations Committee, I am ready to
negotiate. I am ready to compromise. I have reached out to my House
counterpart, the chair of Appropriations. We have a marvelous, civil,
candid relationship. We are ready to go to work.
We differ on money. There is no doubt. The chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee, Congressman Hal Rogers, is a wonderful
gentleman, but I will tell you he is a rock-ribbed, no-nonsense fiscal
conservative. But that is OK by Senator Barb because that is what
compromise is. That is doing what Colin Powell asked us to do: Let's
talk things over. Let's find some sensible center. Let's make sure we
run the U.S. Government in a smart, frugal, effective way. That is what
it would take.
We are ready to do it, but we need--I need Speaker Boehner to pass
the short-term CR so we can even get into the room to do this. So when
you say Senate Democrats will not negotiate or will not compromise, it
is not true.
Also, I heard the junior Senator from Kentucky say that the Senate
has not approved appropriations bills. The Appropriations Committee,
despite being hamstrung by not having a budget, reported 11
appropriations bills. Eight of them were supported by Republicans. By
August 1, our Appropriations Committee had marked up every single bill
except one, Interior. We had marked them up with bipartisan support.
Eight of them had bipartisan support; three did not: Labor-HHS,
Financial Services, and Legislative Branch.
Why did we not get that? Because the Labor-HHS bill and Financial
Services play a role in funding ObamaCare. There we go again. Don't do
anything that would fund ObamaCare. There we go again.
I am so fed up with those riders, those poison-pen riders. We could
have done that to them. We chose not to. I would like to see the
comprehensive immigration bill passed. I didn't put any riders on the
appropriations bills coming out of the Senate. I would have liked to
have seen a farm bill. That has been worked on so hard by Senator
Stabenow, the Senator from Michigan, and Senator Roberts, the Senator
from Kansas--they worked wonderfully on a bipartisan farm bill. It was
something to be proud of in the Senate. I would have liked to have
attached that to the continuing. But we decided no riders, nothing
cute, nothing clever, no earmarks, nothing like that--straightforward
money bills ready to go to conference.
We could not get it, but they are passed. They are passed in the
Appropriations Committee and we are waiting to get to work.
The Republicans, the tea party Republicans say they do not have the
votes in the House to reopen government. Give it a chance. Put the vote
to the floor. If we win, government is reopened. If we lose, at least
we offered a suggestion and we can go back to the drawing board. But
the solution to reopening the government lies on Speaker Boehner's
desk. He says he wants to have a conversation. We say pick it up, have
the vote. That puts the conversation to work for a short-term funding
resolution.
We say to our six Republican Senators who have blocked the Budget
Committee, let the Budget Committee go to conference. Let Senator Patty
Murray and Congressman Paul Ryan meet to resolve these issues. Let's
follow the regular order. Let's get back to the way this government and
this country should function.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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