[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 115 (Tuesday, July 22, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4673-S4676]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATION OF JOHN W. deGRAVELLES TO BE UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the nomination.
The bill clerk reported the nomination of John W. deGravelles, of
Louisiana, to be United States District Judge for the Middle District
of Louisiana.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the time until 12:30
p.m. will be equally divided and controlled in the usual form.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Malaysia Airlines Tragedy
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, I wish to comment on the tragedy of the
civilian airliner shot out of the sky by a Russian surface-to-air
missile, cutting short the lives of 298 innocent civilians. Parents,
children and spouses of victims have expressed deep anguish, and we all
feel their grief.
All of us agree the images we are seeing from the crash site are
heartbreaking and sickening. President Obama, Dutch Prime Minister Mark
Rutte, leaders throughout the world, and many others have expressed
their outrage at the vicious, uncivilized act that took place at 33,000
feet over the country of Ukraine. A few days ago, British Prime
Minister David Cameron stated firmly:
For too long there has been a reluctance on the part of too
many European countries to face up to the implications of
what is happening in eastern Ukraine. . . . Elegant forms of
words and fine communiques are no substitute for real action.
The weapons and fighters being funneled across the border
between Russia and eastern Ukraine; the support to the
militias; the half-truths, the bluster, the delays. They have
to stop.
As the prime minister acknowledged: This is a moment when words of
condemnation and expressions of grief are simply not enough. This is a
moment when action must follow the outrage and rhetorical condemnation.
The tragedy of Malaysian Airlines 17 will be a defining event in
history. It is a defining event for Russia, first and foremost, and for
its President, Vladimir Putin. It is no secret that Putin has imperial
ambitions, motivated by his pathological insecurities, and a quest to
restore lost glory to Mother Russia. These are dangerous delusions. If
they are not confronted firmly, they will come to threaten us all.
But it is also a defining event for the United States and its
European allies. The festering danger in Ukraine is the result of the
civilized world's faltering half-steps as a meager, timid and all too
minimal response to Russia's invasion of a neighbor in violation of
sovereign borders. This is an opportunity for American leadership, in
step with our European allies, to spur the community of nations to act
together and be a force for good and be a force for the right change
that needs to take place--not later, but now.
It is a defining event for President Obama and German Chancellor
Angela Merkel. Today these two leaders, the two who are most able to
influence this situation, can stand up and demonstrate leadership that
will shape history. So this is a pivotal moment--a pivotal moment for
the United States, for Germany, for the European Union and for the
world. Given the significance of this event in this moment, what are we
to do? I do not have all the answers. I have been suggesting harsh
sanctions, sanctions that bite, that hit Russia hard ever since their
invasion of Crimea.
As I have said earlier, what has been done is far too short of what
needs to be done to punish Russia for the breach of sovereignty and now
this brutal and terrible tragic result and consequence of what they are
doing in eastern Ukraine. So first we need to ask the entire civilized
world to join the United States, our European allies, and everyone in
condemning this outrageous act.
Events like this tragedy have no place in the modern world. This
unassailable fact needs to be acknowledged globally and more than once.
It needs to be acknowledged repeatedly until it becomes so loud that
Putin and the Russians can hear it in Moscow and in the Kremlin and see
that what has taken place is the direct result of their engagement in
eastern Ukraine.
Secondly, I think we need to demand complete cooperation with the
ongoing investigation. Positive steps are beginning to take place far
too late, but at least they are starting to take place.
Our commitment to the rule of law, rules of evidence, and to the
demands of justice require that we go through this investigative
process, and we must insist on the access to do so. We must demand
full, immediate, unhindered access to the site of the tragedy,
including all parts of the aircraft, missile battery, site evidence
and, most of all, proper treatment of the remains of the many victims.
President Putin by himself can ensure that success and that access, and
he absolutely must be required to do so.
Third, we need to demand an immediate Russian stand-down in Ukraine.
Crimes like Malaysia Airlines flight 17 can only happen in such a
lawless wasteland--renegades and desperados with their fingers on the
triggers of the world's most advanced weapons. Lawlessness reigns in
eastern Ukraine because the government of that nation still does not
have sovereign control of its own territory.
The situation is greatly exacerbated as a result of President Putin's
outrageous territorial aggression. He has already severed an arm of
Ukraine and threatened an entire country's disintegration.
Make no mistake, the Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine have been
organized, motivated, trained, equipped, unleashed, guided, and
controlled by the forces of the Russian Federation which are controlled
themselves--with totalitarian execution--by none other than President
Vladimir Putin. Now we see a new tragic result of this aggression, of
sponsorship, of ruthless renegades--a blatant act of terrorism
inflicted on innocent people. This problem will only get worse unless
we demand that Russian behavior change and Putin's aggression stop. It
needs to be a voice that resounds from every nation, civilized nation,
in the world.
The only solution to the Ukraine problem is doing what is consistent
with our national law. The demands of order and civility and the
requirements of justice are what Russia must acknowledge and that the
Government of Ukraine must have sovereign control over its own
territory.
No. 4, the United States and Europe must, at last, act vigorously and
in unison if we are to succeed in this effort. Until now, President
Obama has sent largely weak signals to Putin about the seriousness of
Russia's actions. Our European partners have been reluctant to act,
some hypnotized by anxiety about their economic dependency on Russian
oil and gas. Let us hope that after this horrific act of terror against
298 innocent passengers on Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, this view is
changing and changing quickly.
History will see this event as a watershed moment. Some argue that
the Soviet downing of Korean Airlines flight 007 in 1983 was an event
that exposed the true nature of the Soviet regime and hastened its
decay. Similarly, Malaysia Airlines flight 17 reveals to any remaining
doubters the nature of Putin and his brutal ambitions and ruthlessness.
[[Page S4674]]
With illusions stripped away, the inadequacy of half measures
revealed, we must now act and act together. We can respond to this
tragedy by forming and forging a new unity. But only the most robust
and concerted actions to impose economic sanctions on Russia have a
chance to change Putin's behavior and end Russian support for the
separatist militants and, to be effective, we and the Europeans must do
this together, imposing these costs.
We need to target the fragile Russian economy through sanctions on
Russia's energy sector and State-backed arms exporter. While it may
take time for Russia to feel the effects of sanctions on the energy
sector, we can take action today that would have an immediate effect.
I have previously introduced legislation that prohibits all
government contracts with Putin's arms dealers. Taking steps to
meaningfully obstruct this agency's work and the revenue it provides
the Russian State is one of the most effective ways we can condemn
Putin's aggression. Through these specific sanctions we can demand that
Putin end his support for the separatists and accept and work toward a
stable Ukraine. If not, I suggest we do whatever is necessary to bring
Russia's economy to its knees. We need to see that stock market
plummet. We need to see confidence and support for anything Russia
makes or exports denied by the civilized nations of the world. We need
to put measures there to prevent their manufacturing and shipment of
arms to people such as Assad in Syria, to the Iranians, to the groups
that are creating havoc around the world. Russia's arms exports are a
major source of their revenue. We need to stop them.
The decision is in their hands. Following this horrific, brutal,
tragic event, they have the responsibility to the world's nations to
step up and address this issue.
This crisis has reached a point of high tension, great tragedy, and
escalated consequences. These potential consequences are dangerous for
all of us but, most of all, they are dangerous for Putin's Russia.
Russia's President holds in his hands the ability to de-escalate this
crisis or to pay a very steep price. We need to define and implement
that steep price if he doesn't take this action.
It is Putin's choice to bring this situation back from the brink. It
is our obligation, along with our European partners, to make Putin's
choice crystal clear.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Heitkamp). The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. What is the general order?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time between now and 12:30 p.m. is equally
divided, and the Republicans control 5 minutes.
Mr. INHOFE. I ask unanimous consent that I be recognized for 8
minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Global Warming
Mr. INHOFE. Later this week we are going to have the EPA
Administrator Gina McCarthy come to our Environment and Public Works
Committee to testify about the greenhouse gas rule being developed for
existing fleets of powerplants. We know what the rule is for the new
powerplants; this is for the existing.
In light of that, it is important to point out that the Senate has
been debating global warming for well over a decade, actually around 14
years. The first cap-and-trade bill the Senate debated was when
Republicans were in the majority. I was chairman at that time of the
Environment and Public Works Committee.
The first bill was the McCain-Lieberman bill which would have set
CO2 limits on all utilities that emit at least 10,000 tons
of greenhouse gases per year. That was defeated October 30, 2003, by a
vote of 43 to 55. That was when I was all alone. Actually, everyone
thought eventually something was going to pass and they were all afraid
of the issue.
Now times have dramatically changed. Since that time we have had
other bills come up. In 2005 we had the same bill by the same authors.
It was defeated even at that time by a wider range.
Then in 2008 the Lieberman-Warner bill came up, and it failed also.
That was actually when the Republicans had lost the majority. So even
with the Democrats as the majority, they were not able to get it
through.
Most recently, we debated the Waxman and Markey bill of 2009 which
said emissions to facilities over 25,000 tons a year. That bill passed
the House, but it was never brought to the Senate for a vote because
they knew it would fail.
Each of these bills had one thing in common: Their cost was enormous.
We found out--and there was testimony quite some time ago--that if we
were to pass cap-and-trade, the cost would be in the area of $300
billion to $400 billion a year.
I do calculations every time I hear a large number and I go back. In
my State of Oklahoma, I calculate the number of families who actually
file Federal tax returns and do the math. That would cost each family
in Oklahoma about $3,000 a year. We know it doesn't make any
difference, because the testimony of the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, the EPA, Lisa Jackson, who was
appointed by President Obama, said in response to my question on the
public record that even if we were to pass something it would not have
the effect of reducing CO2 emissions worldwide, because this
isn't where the problem is. The problem is in China and other places.
Since this time--and it is not me saying this--Nature magazine, The
Economist, and even the IPCC--the IPCC is the United Nations; they are
the ones who started this--they admit for the past 15 years there has
been no increase in global temperatures. Meanwhile, the CO2
emissions have increased a lot. So obviously it is not warming and that
is going back into a normal cycle.
Unfortunately, this hasn't deterred the President from making global
warming a key part of domestic policy. What he could not have
accomplished through legislation he is now doing through regulations at
the EPA, but the American people don't want anything to do with this.
I can remember when the polls were something like the No. 1 or No. 2
issue. The last Gallup poll, this past week, had it as No. 14 out of 15
issues. The Pew Research Center--53 percent of Americans, when asked
about the cause of global warming, said they don't believe there is
enough evidence to blame human anthropogenic gases or to believe that
it is caused by natural variation.
This problem explains why it is difficult for Tom Steyer. On the
floor I showed his picture and read the comments he had made. He is
raising $100 million to put into campaigns. He has already put up $50
million and has been unable to raise anything close to the next $50
million. So people are not rallying to pour money into this lost cause.
The international community is starting to give up too. I was with
the Secretary of Defense of Australia last night, and he was one of
them who was very strongly in opposition to the cap-and-trade they
adopted in Australia and they have now, as of 1 month ago, repealed it.
If you look at other countries, and not only Australia but others that
were believing this at one time, are dropping off. So the Australian
people should thank the Prime Minister.
It is my hope we will be able to protect the American people from the
senseless global warming policies in the United States.
Tomorrow we are going to have a committee hearing, and the momentum
has actually gone from the other side.
I yield the floor and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. THUNE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
THE ECONOMY
Mr. THUNE. Madam President, here we are--another day in the Senate--
facing another political gimmick. That is the way things seem to work
in the Democratic Senate, and that is what is happening again this
week.
Yesterday Democrats introduced their latest designed-to-fail bill,
the Bring Jobs Home Act. It is a bill they
[[Page S4675]]
know is not going to pass. The reason I say the bill is designed to
fail is because it has already failed. It has been voted on here before
in the previous Congress, but that is not stopping the Democrats.
The Bring Jobs Home Act would supposedly encourage American companies
to bring jobs back home to the United States and to discourage
companies from sending jobs overseas. But the bill completely ignores
the real problem and the reason American companies are sending jobs
overseas: America's broken Tax Code and our sky-high tax rate on
business. America has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the
developed world and many companies simply can't afford to pay it and
stay profitable.
If Democrats were truly serious about solving the problem of American
jobs going overseas, they would be sitting down with Republicans to
hammer out reform of our Tax Code. We should be substantially lowering
overall tax rates to allow American businesses to keep jobs here at
home while remaining competitive in the global marketplace. Instead of
serious reform, however, Democrats have chosen to take up a bill that
would do nothing to address the real problem we are dealing with.
Democrats are not bringing up this bill in the hopes of actually fixing
problems. They are bringing it up in hopes of winning a few votes in
the November election. This is not a secret.
When Democrats first brought this bill up 2 years ago ahead of the
2012 election, Reuters described it as an example of Members of
Congress ``offering up measures they know will not pass but can be used
to fire up their respective supporters in the run-up to November's
elections.'' That was from 2 years ago, the last time this was brought
up. That has been the Democrats' preferred method of operating in the
Senate.
Back in March the New York Times reported that Democrats planned to
spend the spring and summer on messaging votes ``timed to coincide with
campaign-style trips by President Obama.'' Again, that is from the New
York Times earlier this year.
The ``Democrats concede,'' the Times continued, ``that making new
laws is not really the point.'' ``Rather, they are trying to force
Republicans to vote against them.'' That is also a quote which was in
the New York Times story a few months ago. Making new laws is not
really the point. What we are talking about here is not fixing
problems; it is just creating political opportunities.
So 5\1/2\ years of Democratic policies have left American families
hurting. Unemployment, which the President's advisers predicted would
fall below 6 percent in 2012, is still above 6 percent 2 years later.
Almost 10 million Americans are unemployed, and 3.1 million have been
unemployed for 6 months or longer. Those numbers would be even worse if
so many Americans had not given up on finding work and dropped out of
the labor force all together.
Our current labor force participation rate is at lows we have not
seen since the 1970s during the Presidency of Jimmy Carter. In fact, if
the labor participation rate were today what it was when the President
took office, the unemployment rate would not be a little over 6
percent, it would be 10.2 percent. That is how many people have
entirely quit looking for work.
Household income has plummeted by more than $3,300 on the President's
watch. At the same time, prices have risen. Food prices have increased.
The price of gas has nearly doubled, college costs continue to soar,
and family health insurance premiums have skyrocketed by almost $3,000,
despite the President's promise they would fall. And what do you get
when you combine high prices, fewer opportunities for employment and
advancement and reduced income? You get a lot of struggling middle-
class families.
Instead of spending this year taking up serious legislation to help
those families, Democrats--by their own admission--have spent this year
on political show votes they hope will win them a few votes in the
November election.
Last week the Congressional Budget Office issued its yearly long-term
budget outlet. The news on that front was grim. The Congressional
Budget Office recorded that as early as 2039, under its baseline
scenario, the Nation could see public debt reach 106 percent of GDP,
which would be a level of debt seen only once before in our Nation's
history.
By 2039, under an alternative fiscal scenario, the debt-to-GDP ratio
could rise to more than 180 percent of GDP. By comparison, Greece's
current debt-to-GDP ratio is 175 percent. In other words, our economy
could go the way of Greece's in just a few short years if nothing is
done.
We have to take up significant budget reform and reduce the size of
government. We need to look for ways we can make government work more
effectively and more efficiently by reforming programs that need to be
reformed. Chipping away around the edges is not going to get the job
done. It is not going to cut it.
Even before the President came into office, our national debt
presented a serious and pressing problem. But over the last 5\1/2\
years of the current administration, the problem has gotten
exponentially worse. If you look at our total debt--which includes the
public and intergovernmental debt--when President Obama came into
office, our national debt was $10.6 trillion. Today, just 5\1/2\ years
later, our national total debt stands at $17.6 trillion. That is a 66-
percent increase on the President's watch. That is horrifying. Yet
President Obama and his party continue to act as if our country is not
hurdling toward a fiscal crisis.
Among the President's many fiscally irresponsible policies, ObamaCare
stands out as one of the worst offenders. Former Congressional Budget
Office Director Douglas Holtz-Eakin has estimated that the President's
health care law will increase the deficit by hundreds of billions of
dollars in its first 10 years alone and by more than $1.5 trillion over
the next 10 years.
Politico reports that the Congressional Budget Office attributes the
coming growth of the debt to--among other things--``rising health care
costs'' and ``the expansion of subsidies offered through ObamaCare.''
So much for the President's claim that the health care law would be
``the largest deficit reduction plan in over a decade.'' But that is
par for the course for the Affordable Care Act.
The President also promised that the law would reduce Americans'
health insurance premiums by $2,500. Instead, as I mentioned, they have
already risen by almost $3,000, and they are still going up.
I have a few headlines from this past week that I will read into the
Record. Yesterday's Kaiser Health News reported: ``Florida's Biggest
Health Insurer Signals Rate Hikes Ahead.''
The Nebraska Radio Network had an expert who said: ``Nebraskans'
premiums may bounce 30 percent under ObamaCare.''
Last Wednesday, the Nashville Business Journal reported, ``Here come
higher premiums: Tennessee's insurance providers request rate
increases.''
Last Tuesday, the Associated Press reported: ``Delawareans Could Face
Higher Rates Under ACA.''
The New Orleans Times-Picayune reported: ``Some insurance carriers
looking for double-digit increases for Affordable Care Act policies.''
Those are just a few of the most recent headlines from newspapers
around this country last week. I could go on about the health care
law's broken promises. I could also talk about the fact that the
President promised that Americans would be able to keep their doctors
and hospitals, but Americans are now finding the new health plans
exclude doctors and hospitals they have literally been using for
years or the fact that the health care bill was supposed to give more
Americans access to health care but that many Americans are struggling
to find doctors who will take their ObamaCare insurance.
One doctor reporting on her patient's experience with the ObamaCare
plan said: ``We are running into problems with coverage in the same way
we were when they were uninsured.'' Let me repeat that. This is from a
doctor talking about one of her patient's experiences with the
ObamaCare plan: ``We are running into problems with coverage in the
same way we were when they were uninsured.'' If that doesn't sum up the
law's failure, I don't know what does.
Then there was the President's promise that shopping for health care
on the exchange would be like buying a TV on Amazon or a plane ticket
on Kayak. As
[[Page S4676]]
Americans quickly found out or are still finding out almost 10 months
later, shopping on the exchanges is a lot more like the world's most
nightmarish experience with the DMV.
ObamaCare is failing Americans, and so is the Obama economy. Instead
of focusing on making things better, Democrats are focused on trying to
get reelected in November.
Republicans have solutions to the challenges facing the American
people--solutions such as approving the Keystone Pipeline and the tens
of thousands of jobs it would support; repealing the ObamaCare 30-hour
workweek provision, which is slashing employees' hours and wages;
stopping the job-killing national energy tax which will eliminate
hundreds of thousands of jobs and drive up Americans' energy bills;
enacting trade promotion authority to open new markets to American
farmers, workers, and businesses; repealing the medical device tax
which is costing American jobs and increasing the cost of health care;
and passing real health care reform--the kind that will lower costs,
increase choice, and put Americans back in charge of their health care.
If Democrats were serious about helping American families, they would
be working with us on these priorities instead of tying up the Senate
with partisan legislation, and they would be taking up the 40 House-
passed jobs bills currently gathering dust on the majority leader's
desk.
Every day the Senate spends on designed-to-fail bills, designed-to-
fail legislation--bills we know aren't going anywhere--is a day the
Senate is not spending on bills to provide real relief to the American
people.
It is high time for Democrats to stop wasting time on partisan
legislation and start working with Republicans on real reform. Middle-
class, middle-income families around this country have been squeezed
for long enough. The American people have been waiting long enough.
There are 40 House-passed jobs bills waiting for action here in the
Senate. Instead, we are spending week after week of the Senate's time
voting on bills designed to fail and designed to do nothing more than
score political points heading into an election. That is wrong on so
many levels. Most of all, it is wrong for the American people, and it
has to change.
I yield the floor.
____________________