[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 141 (Thursday, October 10, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6458-H6459]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NEED TO REOPEN GOVERNMENT NOW
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, the gentlelady just expressed the
dynamics of a pending default, and I could not agree more with the
horrors of her description. It baffles me, literally baffles me, that
in actuality we are sitting idly by, the Republican leadership,
watching Rome burn.
Let me read for you a note that I got from my district, Mr. Speaker.
``I have no idea if any of you still are in office, but until
further,'' this is asking whether my staff is still in office, ``but
until further notice we have been furloughed effective at 9 a.m. today.
I will send you an email when back in the office, which I hope is soon,
especially since the Senate has not yet passed a bill to pay us even if
furloughed. So we just all hope this is a short time off.''
Who is this? The Houston VA regional office. Isn't it interesting my
friends rise to the floor of the House with such indignation about the
VA, the VA centers, and, yes, tragically the devastation of families
not receiving their memorial benefits; yet here we are today, another
day of the government shutdown, and an email into our district offices
indicating that the VA office is closed.
[[Page H6459]]
Another emergency call came into my office as a fire ravaged a home
of 40 or so veterans. In ordinary circumstances, they would have the VA
office to help resettle them; but we are rolling up our sleeves in
Houston and my message is to those veterans that we are going to work
to find you a place to stay. But, Mr. Speaker, the problem is that the
VA services are shut down while the home of those veterans burned. Who
are we in this country if we cannot think of those who are lesser than
we or who need to be helped with a helping hand?
Mr. Speaker, let me also say to you that while we are in the midst of
this shutdown, this Republican obsession with the Affordable Care Act,
poor people are suffering. There are millions of dollars impacted with
the supplemental nutrition program, the school lunch program. Poor
people need us to open the doors of this Congress to raise the minimum
wage. Today is the day that I will celebrate and encourage America that
the people of this country need to have a minimum wage of $10.10--
$10.10.
But we can't get any action in this place for the poor people of
America. The families, the young families, the young mothers and
fathers, the millions of children impacted by Head Start, some 57,000
seats lost and growing across the Nation, poor people who need access
to early education, poor people, both rural and urban, who need to have
a minimum wage--Mr. Speaker, we can't do that because the government is
shut down.
Why is it shut down? Has there been a hurricane or has there been an
earthquake? Is there a volcanic eruption? Is there some other natural
disaster? Are we under siege by a foreign territory? No. There is an
extreme faction in the Republican Party that dominates the dialogue and
the action.
What the American people want us to do is to vote now to open the
government. They want what the Democrats want: to pay the bills. They
want us to talk. We have been willing to talk. They want us to
cooperate. We have been cooperating. We have agreed to the Republican
number. We agreed to their tax issue, and yet they want to be obsessed
with the Affordable Care Act. They want to take away health benefits
from Americans.
And then the votes that they put on the floor of the House, Mr.
Speaker, these are political votes. We will vote again today, political
votes, while people are suffering with cancer. And the Friends of
Cancer Research will tell them a thing or two. Their letter says:
The Friends of Cancer Research, a cancer research think-
tank and advocacy organization that brings together people
and stakeholders who have overcome the barriers standing
between patient and treatment, urges Congress to take a
comprehensive approach to fiscal policy.
They don't need a piecemeal bill on the floor of the House.
We need to stop the extreme attitude. We need to recognize that the
poor people of America, the people of America, need this shutdown to
stop; and the extreme element of the Republican Party needs to stand
down while Republicans, 20 of them, and Democrats, 200-plus, vote to
open the government now.
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