[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 140 (Wednesday, October 9, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6421-H6422]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE PRESIDENT'S REFUSAL TO NEGOTIATE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Utah
(Mr. Stewart) for 5 minutes.
Mr. STEWART. Mr. Speaker, politics is full of irony, and I believe
that that is a vast understatement compared to what is exhibited on
this floor almost every day. Sometimes that irony bleeds over into the
absurd, and that's what we are facing today when it comes to our
President, who absolutely refuses to even sit down and negotiate over
the debt ceiling limit or over the implementation of ObamaCare or over
the continuing resolution or, frankly, over anything else.
Think about that.
The President of the United States is unwilling to even sit down to
have any negotiations--to have even a conversation--with the Speaker of
the House.
The President likes to say, I won the election, and he likes to
remind us that elections have consequences; but I would remind the
President that I won my election as well and so did 233 other House
Republicans. I represent more than 700,000 people. Those 233 House
Republicans represent more than 150 million people. They expect certain
things of us. They expect us to represent them. They expect us to fight
for those values that we promised that we would. I can't abandon those
values. I owe it to my constituents. I owe it to my family. I owe it to
my Nation. I owe it to myself to continue to fight for those values
that, I think, help to make this Nation the great Nation that it is.
The President is the President of the United States. He is not just
the President of the Democratic Party. He is not just the President of
those States in which he won. He is the President of the United States,
and he owes it to the Americans to be willing to sit down and to try to
negotiate when we come into a conflict such as we have now.
Yes, we've got great challenges before us, but we can work through
these. We always have before. We can find a way to work together.
Republicans and Democrats have been working through their differences
for generations, but we can only do that if we are willing to sit down
and talk with each other. We can only do that if we are willing to be
respectful of the deeply held positions that each of us holds. We can
only do that if we are willing to work together for the betterment of
this Nation, which brings me to the debt limit.
It is like a dark, looming cloud that hangs over us now. We can't
ignore it. We can't pretend that it doesn't matter. We can't pretend
that it's not important. So, like others, I would like to quote from
one who is considered to be a great political leader of this century:
Increasing America's debt weakens us domestically and
internationally. ``Leadership'' means that the buck stops
here. Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad
choices today onto the backs of our children and our
grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of
leadership. Americans deserve better.
Mr. Speaker, of course I'm not quoting Ted Cruz or Mitch McConnell or
the Speaker of the House. I am quoting a young freshman Senator who is
now the President of the United
[[Page H6422]]
States, who at least at one point in his career recognized the serious
and the longstanding threat to this Nation that our rising debt is.
We have the opportunity to work together now to fix this problem; and
if we can't fix it, at least we can take a meaningful step forward. I
hope the President will work with us to address what he used to believe
was a serious problem, but I believe it starts with one thing: sitting
down together and talking in order to work it out.
The American citizens--all of us--deserve a President who is willing
to lead. The American people deserve a President who is willing to
talk. Yes, we live in a day in which there are policy and political
differences, but that has always been the case. From the birth of our
Nation, it has always been such. We are a Nation in which ideas and
principles sometimes conflict, but the American people deserve a
President who understands that negotiating is part of the process.
I pray that the President will sit down and talk with us now.
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