[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5083-S5090]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MAKING EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING
SEPTEMBER 30, 2014--MOTION TO PROCEED--Continued
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I rise to speak on the pending
business before the Senate.
The Senate just achieved cloture on the motion to proceed to the
emergency supplemental funding bill. Let me explain to the people who
are watching this either in the gallery or on C-SPAN.
The Senate has creaky rules, and these creaky rules are to make sure
we can cool the passions that may be raging in the Nation at any given
time so we can duly give consideration, that
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debate can be diligent and we won't be gripped by the fire of the
moment or the passion of the motion. I appreciate that. However, now
these rules require us to take a lot of time to get to the meat of the
matter.
We are now debating a motion to proceed to legislation related to
supplementing existing funding to meet new emerging crises. The Senate
votes on a motion to proceed not to the bill itself but on whether we
should even go to the bill. So what we are debating now is whether we
should proceed to the emergency supplemental funding bill. I want to
say yes. Yes, vote on the motion to proceed. Let's get on with it.
Let's have a real debate on real issues. Thirty hours has been set
aside to debate whether we should proceed. I am here to say let's
proceed, let's yield back our time, and let's get on the bill. We have
a lot of things we need to get done in the next 48 hours. I want to see
this emergency supplemental funding bill debated and voted on.
We have three elements in this bill that meet compelling needs--need
for our neighbors in our country; need for our treasured ally, the
State of Israel; as well as need for a crisis at the border where
children literally are marching across Central America in search of
refugee status. We need to deal with all three of these issues.
This emergency funding bill is about neighbor helping neighbor.
First of all, it is about our own country. Wildfires are raging in
the West. Over the last year 39 States have faced wildfires. Right this
very minute eight Western States are coping with unbelievable
wildfires, some of the largest fires in their history. What happens?
Vast amounts of territory are going up in smoke. We are losing towns,
businesses, homes. Our firefighters are worn out, as well as our first
responders, and they need help. This legislation will provide $615
million to the States facing this horrific Armageddon-like emergency.
In addition, this legislation includes $225 million to replenish the
rockets that are being used by Israel, deploying technology called the
Iron Dome. The Iron Dome is a missile defense system that is destroying
the rockets being sent into Israel by Hamas. The technology is working,
but they are using up the rockets and they need to be replenished.
Then there is the humanitarian crisis at our border. We have $2.7
billion to meet the needs of children seeking refuge, in order to be
able to deal with placing them while we determine their legal status
but also being able to fight the crime of the narcotraffickers and the
human traffickers who are creating this surge of children.
This is a total emergency funding level of $3.57 billion. Why do we
call it an emergency? Well, because under the law we can't just say
this is an emergency. In order to get emergency funding, we have to
meet the criteria of the Budget Control Act of 2011. The need has to be
urgent. It has to be temporary. It has to be unforeseen. It is either
to prevent the loss of life or in the interests of our national
security. All three of these areas of funding meet this need.
Under emergency funding, there are no offsets. That means we don't
take from another important program being funded by the U.S. Government
to meet that need. So in order to meet the needs of Iron Dome, we don't
take from other national defense money. It will replenish that. When we
help with wildfires, we don't take from other important areas, such as
agriculture or interior or from other bills. This will help to not only
meet the need but also not place an additional burden on other
communities.
Now I wish to speak about the urgency. This firefighting help is
really needed now. We listened to the Senators from Western States. We
see the photographs literally showing parts of our country going up in
smoke. The Forest Service--the agency that actually is in charge of
dealing with this--will run out of money in August. As I said, last
year these wildfires burned in 39 States.
Then we look at Iron Dome. Hamas--this violent terrorist organization
that actually rejects Israel's right to even exist--from its tunnels is
showering Israel with rockets. Iron Dome, Arrow Head, and David's Sling
are missile defense systems designed to help them. The up-close missile
defense system is Iron Dome. This bill will make sure we replace the
interceptor rockets that are being used to protect them against this
showering of rockets. The Israeli Embassy spoke to my staff yesterday.
There have been over 2,000 Hamas rockets fired in the last week. Israel
needs to replenish these rockets.
Then there is the issue of the surge of unaccompanied children
presenting themselves at our border, asking for refugee status. In
order to really be able to meet this crisis--and they are coming in by
the thousands; 59,000 kids have come this year. We know the immigration
and customs service, if we don't meet this emergency funding, will run
out of money in August. Border Patrol will run out of money in early
September. That doesn't mean the Border Patrol agents or the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents will stop working; it means
the Department of Homeland Security--22 agencies--will take money out
of existing funds to fund this. So it means they could take money out
of Federal emergency management just as we are going into hurricane
season, just as we are in high tornado season. We could be taking money
out of FEMA to put it in Border Patrol unless we do this emergency
funding. We have to do it.
Health and Human Services runs out of money in August. They are the
ones in charge when the children present themselves while their legal
status is being determined. The children must be taken care of in a
humane way, the American way. We don't treat children in an abusive
manner. It means we will feed them, we will clothe them, we will
shelter them, we will meet any emergency health needs they have, and we
need to do that while we determine their legal status.
My bill--the supplemental I am presenting--helps accelerate the
determination of their legal status. My legislation and this
supplemental spending actually provide more immigration judges and
legal representation for the children. That is so we can quickly
determine if they have a right to asylum while we are also taking care
of them. We need to be able to do that.
I hope others will get the briefings that I had and visit the border
the way I did to find this out. The reason we have a crisis at the
border is because we have a crisis in Central America. This legislation
provides the money to do this. People say root causes such as poverty
have been going on for years. This doesn't only deal with poverty. We
want to work with the governments of Central America to really go after
the narcotraffickers, the human traffickers, and the coyotes engaged in
smuggling.
Why do we want to do that? If we ask these children where are the
home towns they are from, they will give us the names of little cities
and little towns, and when we look at their poverty rate, we find the
poverty rate in these communities has been consistent for a number of
years. That is a sad circumstance. But when we look at the crime rate,
the murder rate, the recruitment into violent gangs, the recruitment
into human trafficking, with the threat of death or torture--that is
where these kids are coming from.
We have to go after the criminals in Central America and not treat
these children as though they are criminals. We cannot treat children
in this country as though they are the criminals. We need to go after
the real criminals in Central America using our assets and working with
the assets in Central America. They have programs and they have plans.
Honduras is a great example of what they are trying to do. They need
our help. If we don't want the crisis at our border, we need to deal
with the crisis in Central America.
That also deals with our insatiable, unending, vociferous appetite
for drugs. The drugs have created the narcoterrorists. Once people
start selling drugs, they are willing to sell women and children like
commodities, and if they are willing to sell women and children like
commodities, then that is where the vial, repugnant practice of human
trafficking and human smuggling and even a new form of slavery--sexual
slavery--begins.
These children are on the march. And when we talk to these children,
we learn they are terrific children. They are brave and gutsy. When we
talk to the boys, we learn they don't want to be part of the gangs.
They want to get
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out. They want to get out, so they start this long march from their
home country to Mexico to make it on the Rio Grande on rafts and by
swimming and so on so they can make it to our border. When we talk to
the girls, we learn the girls want to go to school and get an
education. They don't want to be recruited into these vial
circumstances. These are earnest, hard-working children who want to
have safety, who want to have a future, and we want to be able to see,
by interviewing them, if they qualify for refugee status. If they
don't, they will have to go back home, but if they do, they get to stay
here. So they deserve the protection under law. We need to pass this
legislation.
This bill is a funding bill. It does not include immigration
legislation. We say those kinds of things can either be brought up in
another way or another method, but this is a clean funding bill. When I
say ``clean,'' it means it has no legislative language on it related to
immigration. So I hope we can pass this legislation.
Now, I have listened to my own constituents, and many of them are
saying to me: Hey, Barb, we are not against these kids. In fact, recent
polling says 69 percent of the American people say if they are
refugees, we should take care of them and they have a right to
determine their legal status. But many of my constituents say: Hey,
Barb, what about us? What does this mean? You are going to spend more
money? What about my schools? When do we get help? My kids need help.
They need schools; they need health care. You talk to families now.
They are getting ready to go back to school. Many parents cannot wait
for sales-tax-free day in Maryland, where you can get your backpack and
your school supplies and your little clothes and shoes. My God, the
cost of kids' shoes now is a small fortune, and they will outgrow them
by the time they get to Thanksgiving. Parents are looking for bargains,
for deals, to be able to do this. They are not hostile, but they wonder
about them.
I want to say to them, I hear you. I was touched by a very poignant
story over the weekend about how we have a food bank at Steelworkers
Hall in Baltimore. Bethlehem Steel closed. It will never, ever, ever
come back. The steelworkers of America, who contributed to the United
Way, were always the first in line if a blood bank was necessary. Now
many of those who lost their job are using the very food bank that they
once donated to.
That story was so moving because we have lost our manufacturing. We
have just lost a bill earlier today on bringing jobs back home--
something I know the Presiding Officer is for, I sure am for, and so
on. So I know American families are hurting. Yes, they are. But I want
to bring out that the cost of this bill is the same amount of money as
we are going to spend on training the Afghan National Security Forces.
Did you know that? So we are going to spend $4 billion--that is
``billion'' as in ``Barb,'' not ``million'' as in ``Mikulski''--$4
billion to train the Afghan National Security Forces. I am not going to
debate the merits of that. But we can spend money all over like that
and we cannot spend money at our border and also for threats to our
border because of narco terrorism that breeds other vile, repugnant,
heinous behavior? I think we have to get real here.
The reason I want a supplemental--that is urgent and meets that
criteria--is that we do not have to take the money from other important
programs that do help America's families in education, in health, in
job retraining in order to bring our jobs back home.
So I really do hope we pass this bill. Not spending money will not
save money. It means we will just take out of existing programs and the
American people will pay for it doubly. They will pay for it through
inaction, which will ultimately cost more. They will pay for it because
they will lose programs they thought they were going to have access to
or there will be limited availability.
We have a chance here now to help our neighbors in our Western
States. I know Wisconsin has been hit by it terribly, and we are so
sorry for the loss of property and the danger to that community. It
will help a treasured ally, Israel, which we must. Also, we will help
our own country. The way to protect our border is two ways: fight it in
Central America and also show what we stand for. If children are
applying for refugee status, they should have their day in court and
under the law proceed.
So, Madam President, we are now on this motion to proceed. Let's get
on with it. Let's yield back our time. Let's get to the bill. Let's get
the job done. I hope at the end of the day the vote will be ``yes.''
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Mr. BLUNT. Madam President, I want to talk principally in the next
few minutes about a bill that Senator Boxer and I have introduced this
week on Israel and talk about what is going on in Israel, but on the
work that is the bill before us right now, I am always hesitant to
disagree with the chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, my
chairwoman, my good friend, Senator Mikulski. I just think we are
headed in the wrong direction here.
Providing money, and not trying to solve this problem, not sending
the right message, I think is a mistake. People are leaving these
dangerous countries--if they are dangerous to be in, they are also
dangerous to travel through, they are dangerous to leave.
One of the concerns I have had during this whole debate is how many
kids leave their home country and never get to the American border?
What happens to those kids? We have heard stories in briefings that
were not classified about kids who never get here because they get sold
into some sort of terrible situation, even kids whose organs are
harvested and sold that way. This cannot be something we need to
continue to encourage.
In fact, if you do qualify for asylum in the United States, there is
a way to do that. That is why we have embassies. That is why we have
consulates. Surely, it is safer for someone in Guatemala City to go to
the American Embassy in Guatemala City than it is to leave Guatemala
City and try to come through their country, through other countries,
through Mexico to get here, under the control of people who have tried
to make the most of the President's announcement that if you get here,
you can stay here.
This is not the Red Cross bringing kids here. This is not some
altruistic group bringing kids here. These are people who are taking
advantage of misinformation in their country about what happens if you
get here. And some of these kids do not get here. Doing this in this
way--money without policy; acting like somehow it does not cost
anything if it is an emergency, and so we can continue to do everything
the chairwoman mentioned that needs to be done in the United States,
but we can also do this because it is a supplemental, it is an
emergency, and it is more money we borrow from somebody else--life is
full of choices, and for our government we have choices.
There are things that need to be done right now to send a message: Do
not leave your home country. The door is not wide open, no matter what
the President's announcement in 2011 led people to believe.
The law needs to be changed so that immigrants from all countries
coming to our borders are treated just like immigrants from Mexico and
Canada coming to our borders. They have an immediate hearing within 7
days or so. Almost all of them are told: You have to go back. Once that
happens, almost all of them stop coming.
It would be a mistake to do this in this way, and I believe this bill
never winds up on the President's desk. The House of Representatives
does not share this view, even if a majority of the Senate does.
We need to send a message to Guatemala, to El Salvador, to every
other country that the door is not open. Just getting here is not
enough. This is not a safe ``Disneyland-type'' ride to the United
States of America. This is a very, very dangerous thing for you to try
to do, and you should not try to do it. When you get here, it is not
going to be successful.
Again, let me say, if you have a case that you should have asylum in
this country, there is a way you do that which is much safer than
showing up at the border. We should not encourage the danger that these
kids go through. I think the case is very dramatic on the side that
cares for the lives of these
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kids. We should send the message strongly and now: Do not come the way
you are coming now. The kids who get to the border--we are concerned
about what happens to them as a country because of who we are. We
should be equally concerned about the kids who never get to the border
because of this false message we have sent.
U.S.-Israel Strategic Partnership Act
But, Madam President, let me spend a few minutes talking about a bill
that Senator Boxer and I introduced this week, the U.S.-Israel
Strategic Partnership Act of 2014. This is an updated version of
legislation we first introduced in March 2013.
This bill that was introduced this week is already backed by more
than three-quarters of the Senate. I am hoping we figure out how to get
this done and get this done this week. There has never been a more
important time to send a message to the world and to Israel about this
relationship, about what it means to us, about how committed we are to
it.
This legislation reaffirms our unwavering commitment to Israel's
security and the strong relationship that goes back to the founding of
Israel. It supports deepened U.S.-Israel cooperation on defense,
including continued U.S. assistance for the Iron Dome. By the way, the
Iron Dome assistance in the Defense appropriations bill that the
Appropriations Committee approved, that is the way to fund the Iron
Dome. Do the work for the fiscal year that begins October 1. We are 2
months and a couple days from the time this fiscal year is over. We
should be having bills on the floor that talk about the Iron Dome, but
it should be the Defense bill. It should not be some bill that we are
talking about because we are unwilling to go through the regular
process.
But we do in this bill talk about the Iron Dome. We reiterate our
support to negotiating a settlement, a political settlement that the
Government of Israel is for where you would have two states, but both
of those states have to recognize each other. You cannot have two
states where Hamas and others that are significant parts apparently now
of the coalition on the other side deny that Israel has a right to
exist. But we do support the Israeli concept that we want to have two
states peacefully coexisting. That is reiterated here. But it is also
clearly understood that you cannot have one of those states say the
other one does not have a right to exist.
We have a longstanding relationship here. Really it dates back to the
very moment that Israel was founded. My fellow Missourian, President
Truman, in great leadership, decided we would immediately recognize
Israel, and that moment, that decision, that commitment from the United
States continues today through security, through energy, through trade.
We would like to make that clear and make that clear this week.
What does the U.S.-Israel Strategic Partnership Act do?
First of all, it authorizes an increase of $200 million in the value
of U.S. weapons held in Israel, to a total of $1.8 billion. What does
that mean? Does that mean we are spending $200 million more? No. It
means we are putting more of our equipment in Israel, with the clear
understanding that it is there for us to use in the time of a crisis.
It is also there for Israel to have access to when they need it. And
when they use it, they pay us back and replenish that stockpile that we
have strategically placed in Israel for our future use and for an
immediate challenge to Israel where they may need to look at that
stockpile of our weapons there.
It requires the administration to take steps to include Israel in the
top-tier category for license-free exports. The top-tier category of
looking at the technologies we share with any other country we would
suggest you should also be able to share with Israel. If they are
uniquely held in our country, technologies that we do not want to share
with anybody, they are not considered in that category.
It authorizes the President to carry out cooperation between the
United States and Israel on a range of policy issues. They include
defense; water, things like the water salinization efforts that Israel
is, frankly, ahead of us in and we need to understand, as we look
forward to water needs; homeland security, alternative fuel
technologies, more cooperation in cyber security. All those things are
authorized in this bill.
There is new language that encourages the administration to work with
Israel to help the country gain entry status in the Visa Waiver
Program, which would make it easier for Israeli citizens to travel to
the United States without first having to get a waiver, but it would
also make it easier for people in our country to go there.
It requires the administration to provide more frequent and more
detailed assessments of the status of a qualitative military advantage
that we have committed that Israel would always have. This bill that
Senator Boxer and I have introduced just says we are going to check
that even more often and in more detail to be absolutely sure in that
troubled part of the world that Israel's adversaries look at Israel and
can clearly understand that Israel has an advantage that makes up for
the difference in its size.
It strengthens the collaboration between the United States and Israel
on energy development. It encourages increased cooperation in academic,
business, and governmental sectors.
This legislation amends previous legislation related to how people
can travel between our two countries. We do have a unique situation. In
the recent fighting in Israel, two American citizens, members of the
Israeli Defense Forces with dual citizenship in this country and in
Israel, were killed in that fighting. This is one of the unique
relationships we have in the world where people actually leave our
communities, go to another country they also care about, fight in the
uniform of that country, because this country is our ally. We need to
look for ways to continue to emphasize that.
It authorizes but does not require the Secretary of Homeland
Security, in consultation with the Secretary of State, to waive the
nonimmigration refusal rate requirement for Israel, but only if Israel
meets all of the other program requirements, and then it is still
authorized but not required.
This is a particularly important time to send this message. This is
an important time to send this message of continued support between our
two countries. Israel--we see, looking at the Gaza situation today,
during recent months uncertainty in Egypt, support from terrorist
groups all over the world, weaponry, missiles taken into Gaza, money
that could have been spent on concrete that could have been used to
build houses, schools, hospitals, and places for jobs, was used to
build tunnels so that people could come into Israel and attack Israel.
Certainly the Government of Israel and the citizens of Israel look at
this moment and think: No time to quit now with this job partially
done. Some of the messages that have been sent from our country have
not been helpful and encouraging in regard to what has to happen in the
middle of this conflict.
But this kind of legislation sends a message, the message we should
send. I hope we can get to it this week. I am pleased that three-
quarters of our colleagues--I think that number is right at 80--have
cosponsored this legislation. The legislation was just introduced this
week. So if there is any question to our friends in Israel, and maybe
more importantly others around the world, where the Senate, and
hopefully by the end of the week the Congress, stands, this action
sends that message. I cannot think of a more critical time to send that
message. I hope we see this bill on the floor and send that message
this week.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.
Mr. UDALL of Colorado. Madam President, I rise today to speak in
favor of a critical issue for Coloradans; that is, fighting,
mitigating, and recovering from wildfire. Recent history has shown my
State that there is no greater threat to our communities, water
supplies, and our special way of life than wildfire. Successive
megafires over the past few years have broken records faster than they
can be written down.
Even today's flash floods in recently burned areas are a reminder
that after the embers of wildfires have cooled, their destruction
lingers for months and years. I used to joke that Coloradans were
strong and prepared for anything, come hell or high water. But I had no
idea that the past several years would bring both, with modern
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megafires and floods devastating thousands of households and
businesses. We have endured these tests, and we have communities all
over the State, such as Black Forest, that are rebuilding. But these
recent disasters and the fires burning today in Colorado, California,
Washington, and across the West show that the status quo is
unacceptable. The cost of inaction for homeowners and first responders
alike is too high to not act. That is why I have come to the floor
today to speak in favor of a few smart, bipartisan, and fiscally
responsible bills that are in front of our Congress right now.
These bills, taken together, address wildfires in a comprehensive way
by attacking the problem before, during, and after a fire. So if I
might, I want to share some of the elements in these important pieces
of legislation.
First, I want to focus on what we can do before a wildfire at the
individual and community level to reduce risk. There are many studies,
numerous studies, that single out the most important factor in
protecting homes. That is, if you do mitigation work. You involve
yourself with ignition-resistant construction techniques. You reduce
hazardous fuels around your home.
That is one of the reasons I introduced the commonsense legislation
that is entitled the Wildfire Prevention Act of 2013. It will help
homeowners in communities better reduce the risk of wildfire damages
upfront. I am very pleased that the bill is moving forward in a
bipartisan fashion. I am working with Senator Inhofe as my Republican
partner. In the House, two Members of our delegation from Colorado,
Congressmen Polis and Tipton, have joined with their California
colleagues to lead this bill through the House. That is what Coloradans
expect from their elected representatives, collaboration for the good
of our State and country.
This bill is a game changer, not just in my State but across fire-
prone communities in the West and increasingly in other parts of our
country, the upper Midwest, the Northeast, Florida. You name it,
wildfire has continued to be a threat more broadly across our country.
What this act will do, the Wildfire Prevention Act, is it will allow
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, to provide hazard
mitigation grants to States and localities to implement these
mitigation projects. These mitigation projects will help put Colorado
communities and public lands managers on the offensive. We put our
communities and our public lands managers in front of the threat of
megafires. We can head them off before they even start. It is an idea
that came from Colorado. It is more than just a commonsense idea; it is
a fiscally responsible approach to dealing with the threat of wildfire.
Why do I say that? Well, studies show that for every dollar you put
on hazard mitigation upfront, it saves an average of $4 down the line
if you have to fight a fire. For that reason, and the other ones I
mentioned, I am going to keep doing everything I possibly can to move
this bipartisan bill to the President's desk this year.
The second point I want to make and discuss with colleagues is that
we must fundamentally change and modernize how the Federal Government
funds wildfire-suppression operations. That is another way of saying
fighting fires, wildfire-suppression operations. The rising severity of
modern fires has caused land management agencies to divert resources
away from the critical fire prevention efforts I just described to
fight fires that are already burning. This is a vicious self-
perpetuating cycle that is called ``fire borrowing,'' which then only
increases the risk of catastrophic fires later.
It is a backwards way of budgeting. It is classic robbing Peter to
pay Paul and leaves us all to bear much larger costs, most notably our
communities in Colorado. That is why I joined Senators Wyden and Crapo
on their bipartisan bill that would finally separate wildfires like
other natural disasters and help make sure that we are not fighting
fires that could have been prevented. This is a sensible approach for
many reasons. It has been cosponsored by 120 Members of Congress in the
House and the Senate. It has been endorsed by over 150 groups, ranging
from the timber industry, to the environmental community. That speaks
volumes about the utility of this and the broad support, obviously.
My hometown State newspaper, the Denver Post, put it this way earlier
this month, ``Using disaster fund money for wildfires could solve a lot
of problems long-term, and we hope Congress sees it that way.'' I also
hope my colleagues see it that way. If we are serious here about
helping prevent future wildfires and reducing the threats to lives and
property, we all join together and pass this legislation.
Proper wildfire budgeting and the use of disaster relief funds would
help break this vicious cycle of fire borrowing and allow our natural
resource agencies to manage healthy forests, instead of fighting
megafires. I have the great privilege of chairing on the energy
committee, which the Presiding Officer serves on, the National Parks
Subcommittee. I know all too well the problems this bill could solve.
If we adopted this measure, this new way of wildfire budgeting, we
could ensure that the resources are available for our national forest
supervisors to reduce hazardous fuels, provide quality recreation
experiences, and provide the timber supply to sustain a diverse forest
products industry. It would be there for the uses we need them to be
there for.
We could do this also while upgrading our safe, modern air tanker
fleet in such a way that would keep our communities and firefighters
safe. So this legislation I just described is in the emergency
supplemental appropriations measure before the Senate here today. We
really need to pass it. It is crucial. It is an opportunity we have to
grab. In the supplemental appropriations act before this body, there is
$615 million to prevent fire borrowing this year, get resources on the
ground fighting these blazes, and help our resource agencies plan unto
the future.
I know House Appropriations Chairman Rogers. The Presiding Officer
and I both know Chairman Rogers. He did say that he did not include
wildfire funding in their supplemental because, in his words, ``there
is no urgency for such money.'' I have to respectfully disagree with my
friend Chairman Rogers. I know Coloradans, as well as people in
Washington State, California, and many States across the West would not
only disagree, they would strenuously disagree. I would invite Chairman
Rogers to come out to the West and see firsthand how urgent the
situation is for our communities.
Let me finish with a couple of remarks about other elements in this
supplemental.
My colleague Senator Blunt from Missouri, just spoke of the Iron Dome
system. The supplemental includes emergency funding for Israel's Iron
Dome system. It has intercepted hundreds of Hamas rockets targeting
civilian areas over the last several weeks. It has literally been a
lifesaver for our Israeli allies many times over.
I chair the Strategic Forces Subcommittee, which has responsibility
for the Iron Dome and working with Israel and the Israeli Defense
Forces. I heard today from an Israeli who said the system is
miraculous. As Hamas continues to rain rockets down, we need to ensure
that this system continues to protect our friends and allies in Israel.
Finally, this supplemental includes critical resources to help
address the root causes that have led to the humanitarian crisis at our
southern border. So, in summary, I am glad we have moved forward on
debating this crucial supplemental appropriations bill. Let's move to
an up-or-down vote as soon as we possibly can. This is a timely debate.
Passage of this bill is too important to allow partisan gridlock to
interfere. So let's come together, let's show the American people we
can meet our obligations and rise above partisanship.
I urge my colleagues to support this legislation.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Dakota.
Policies Focus
Mr. THUNE. Madam President, I rise today to talk about the disturbing
leadership failure we are seeing out of the White House. Over the past
year the President and his administration have seemed increasingly out
of touch with the many challenges facing our country at home and
abroad. Two weeks ago the President's spokesman told reporters, ``I
think that there have
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been a number of situations in which you have seen this administration
intervene in a meaningful way that substantially furthered American
interests and substantially improved the tranquility of the global
community.'' Let my repeat that. ``Substantially improved the
tranquility of the global community.''
Well, fighting is going on right now in Israel and the Gaza Strip.
Russia is actively involved in a war in Ukraine and recently played a
role in bringing down a Malaysian airliner with 298 people onboard.
Iraq is virtually in chaos. Much of the country is under the control
of a terrorist organization considered by al Qaeda to be too extreme.
Those are just some of the most serious trouble spots that we face
right now. Yet the President's spokesman claims that ``there have been
a number of situations in which you have seen this administration
intervene in a meaningful way that have substantially improved the
tranquility of the global community.''
Not only can I not think of a number of situations in which the
President's action has substantially improved tranquility, I find it
hard to think of one. We are actually looking at more points of serious
instability than we have seen in decades.
Writing in the Washington Post over the weekend, the paper's
editorial page noted that during the President's administration: ``we
have witnessed as close to a laboratory experiment on the effects of
U.S. disengagement as the real world is ever likely to provide.''
Disengagement is a good description of the President's attitude
because right now the President doesn't even seem to be paying
attention. Obviously America can't fix all of the world problems, but
strong American leadership can help, as we have seen many times over
the past century.
Strong American leadership, however, requires a President who is
fully engaged and this President is anything but.
Tens of thousands of children are arriving at our southern border.
The President is playing pool. When a plane is shot down in Ukraine,
the President keeps right on with his campaign schedule.
Earlier this month, as thousands of unaccompanied children were
making their dangerous trip across the southern border--because of the
President's statement if they got here they could stay--the President
traveled to Texas, but he didn't go to assess the situation himself. He
was, as the Associated Press reported, ``primarily in Texas to raise
money for Democrats.''
Weeks later, despite taking multiple trips to fundraise for
Democrats, the President still hasn't visited the border, despite calls
to visit from members of his own party. Indeed, the President has
largely stopped even discussing the crisis. This is the same President
whose spokesman described him as having substantially improved the
tranquility of the global community.
Our world is facing a number of very serious crises now, and the
President seems completely unaware of it. Unfortunately, when it comes
to domestic issues, the President seems equally out of touch.
The President has recently taken to telling his audience that ``by
almost every economic measure, we're doing a whole lot better now than
we were when I came into office.''
Try telling that to the American families who are doing worse.
Average household income has dropped by nearly $3,000 on the
President's watch. Meanwhile, prices have risen. Food prices are
higher. The price of gasoline has almost doubled. College costs
continue to soar.
Health care premiums which the President promised would fall by
$2,500 have increased by almost $3,000, and they are still climbing.
Combine high prices with declining income and we get a whole lot of
families who were once comfortably in the middle class are now
struggling to make ends meet. The Obama administration's economy
provides few opportunities for these families to improve their
situation.
In 2009 the President's advisers predicted that the unemployment rate
would fall below 6 percent in 2012. Two years later unemployment still
hasn't fallen below 6 percent. The only reason the unemployment rate is
as low as it is is because so many Americans have given up looking for
work and dropped out of the labor force altogether. If the labor force
participation rate were as high today as it was when the President took
office, our unemployment rate would be about 10 percent.
Even when jobs do become available, too often they are low-paying
jobs, not the kinds of jobs that help middle-class families achieve
financial security or move low-income families into the middle class.
Take the most recent jobs report. Under the President's policies, the
economy lost 523,000 full-time jobs and gained 799,000 part-time jobs
last month, which is the largest 1-month jump in part-time employment
in 20 years.
I will give the President this, he does talk. He talks about helping
middle-class families, but he has steadily opposed measures to help
them.
Republicans have proposed numerous measures to create good-paying
jobs and increase opportunity. We have urged the President to approve
the Keystone Pipeline and the tens of thousands of jobs it would
support. In fact, Democrats have urged the President to approve it too.
The President said no.
Republicans have proposed fixing the 30-hour workweek provision in
ObamaCare, which is cutting workers' hours and wages. The President has
said no.
Republicans have proposed repealing the medical device tax, which has
already eliminated thousands of jobs in the medical device industry and
will eliminate many more if it isn't repealed. A lot of Democrats agree
with that position. The President said no.
The President hasn't just said no to measures that would help the
middle class, he has implemented policies that have hit the middle
class with tremendous financial burdens. Chief among the President's
burdensome policies of course is ObamaCare. The President told an
audience in Wilmington, DE, the other day that thanks to his
administration, millions more now have the peace of mind of having
quality, affordable health care if they need it.
Try telling that to the Americans who lost their health care plans as
a result of the President's law and were forced to replace them with
plans that cost more and offered less. Try telling that to the
Americans who obtained health care plans under the Affordable Care Act
only to discover their plan didn't cover the doctor they wanted it to
cover. Tell it to the families paying thousands of dollars more each
year in premiums, deductibles, and copays thanks to the President's
health care law. That does not even mention the drag the health care
law is having on the economy.
Part of the reason there are so few opportunities for American
families to get ahead is because the President's health care law is
making it more difficult for businesses to afford to hire new workers.
Now the President is piling up his budget-busting health care law
with a national energy tax that will drive up energy bills for American
families and put hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work.
Nero may have fiddled while Rome burned, the President fundraises.
The Washington Post reports:
In his two presidential terms combined, Bush hosted 318
fundraisers. Obama has already smashed that number with 393
events to date.
And he still has 2\1/2\ years to go in his administration.
Instead of urging the President to focus on crises at home and
abroad, Democrats have taken a leaf from the President's book and spent
the past several months focused on elections. Rather than taking up
legislation to provide real help for struggling middle-class families,
Senate Democrats have spent months--months--on political show votes and
designed-to-fail legislation they hope will win them a few votes in
November.
Our country is facing challenges at home and abroad. Campaigning has
its place, but in Washington Members of Congress and the President
should be focused on solving the problems facing our country,
supporting middle-class families, and restoring America's economic
vitality.
It is time for Democrats and the President to stop focusing on
politics and start focusing on the policies we need to create jobs, to
grow the economy, and support freedom and opportunity at home and
around the world.
[[Page S5089]]
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
African Growth and Opportunity Act
Mr. CARDIN. Next week, between August 4 and August 6, the United
States will welcome leaders from across the African Continent to
Washington, DC.
I first wish to acknowledge the work of our colleague Senator Coons,
the chairman of the Subcommittee on African Affairs, Foreign Relations
Committee, for the work he has done on behalf of the Senate to make
this opportunity a real chance to strengthen the economic ties, to
strengthen the strategic ties between the countries of Africa and the
United States.
We expect there will be robust discussions that will be encouraging
economic growth, unlocking opportunities, and fostering greater ties
between our country and Africa.
One of the areas that I hope will get some debate and discussion
during next week's meetings will be a key government trade initiative
that makes these ties possible; that is, the African Growth and
Opportunity Act, AGOA.
AGOA provides qualifying sub-Saharan countries duty-free access to
the U.S. market for a wide variety of products. It was first signed
into law in 2000 by President Clinton and has been strengthened and
extended by Congress and both President Bush and President Obama.
AGOA enjoyed broad bipartisan support throughout the years because
its advocates recognize the crucial role Africa plays in the global
economy.
The African Continent is one of the world's fastest growing regions.
For instance, by 2035, it is estimated that Africa will have a larger
working-age population than China. I mention that because it is
certainly in our interest to have stable partners who develop their
economy and can work in strategic partnership with the United States,
but it also means we are going to have stronger markets for U.S.-
produced goods and products. As we have a growing middle class in
Africa, it represents a market for U.S. manufacturers, producers, and
farmers, which creates more jobs in the United States.
AGOA allows the United States and Africa to both take advantage of
this dynamism. Since the act was fully implemented in 2001, U.S.
imports under AGOA have tripled. Nonoil AGOA trade has increased
fourfold.
Some of the sectors that AGOA has helped open are apparel, textiles,
jewelry, handicrafts, and electronics. AGOA has created hundreds of
thousands of jobs in those sectors, most of those in the apparel
sector, where women comprise 75 to 90 percent of the industry.
In sub-Saharan Africa women are at the highest risk of being poor.
AGOA has tackled barriers to poverty reduction by eliminating tariffs
on goods that come from many sectors in which women are employed.
Modern trade agreements and initiatives are much more than just
lowering tariffs. It also involves dealing with good governance
practices.
In an increasing global economy, we can no longer consider issues
such as labor rights, human rights, and good governance as issues that
are separate from trade.
Trade with our country is a benefit with deserving nations that share
our values. Strong commitments to the rule of law and human rights are
an essential part of those values and level the playing field between
the United States and our partners in the global marketplace.
AGOA is no exception. The Act has been encouraging these commitments
since it was first enacted. In other words, this is not only an
opportunity by lowering barriers to our markets, it is also about
expectations and enforcement that the African countries will improve
their good governance and their labor rights so we have a more level
playing field.
To qualify for AGOA benefits, countries must establish or make
continual progress on measures that promote good governance and a fair
economic system. These include fundamental rights, the rule of law, a
system that combats corruption, and policies that increase access to
health care, education, and expand physical infrastructure. In other
words, the African countries involved that take advantage of AGOA must
have continuing progress on the good governance key issues.
For example, as part of the annual AGOA review process, the U.S.
Department of Labor examines AGOA countries' efforts to implement and
enforce workers' rights, including the right of association, the right
to organize and bargain collectively, prohibitions on forced or
compulsory labor, a minimum age for the employment of children, and
acceptable conditions of work.
These are the International Labour Organization standards. The ILO
standards are very much a part of the progress we made under AGOA in
the African countries. Improvements in these areas have been shown to
foster the kind of inclusive economic growth and opportunities that
raise families and nations out of poverty.
We understand that by developing stronger economies in African
countries, we are building more stable African countries, countries
that are more reliable to be partners with the United States in dealing
with global issues.
We understand that by doing that we are going to have a stronger
partner sharing U.S. values. This is just one of the tools we use. We
also use our transparency initiatives. We included in the Dodd-Frank
legislation transparency on extractive industries that operate globally
but also in Africa so we could find and make sure the wealth of a
country is actually going to its people. That requires good governance.
AGOA is one of our tools to accomplish that good governance.
So these countries that have mineral wealth, the wealth is not a
curse but truly benefits the people of that country.
AGOA helps, the transparency initiatives that we passed help, but
this is the issue: The current authorization of AGOA expires on
September 30, 2015. Once again, Madam President, as you know, as you
worked so hard, we need predictability in our law. Short-term
extensions don't do much good. What we need is a long-term economic
commitment with the continent of Africa.
A bipartisan effort in Congress to extend and improve this important
legislation is already underway. The U.S. Trade Representative has been
reviewing AGOA's successes as well as the areas that can be improved.
Later today in the Senate Finance Committee we will be holding a
hearing on AGOA, and Ambassador Froman will be one of the witnesses at
that hearing. So we will have a chance to work together, bipartisan
members of Congress with the administration.
One of the areas we are looking at is strengthening the eligibility
criteria to further incentivize improvements in human rights, and I
will be talking about that in the Finance Committee. Another area is
providing coordinated technical assistance and capacity building. This
is very important. Too often trade and development policies operate on
separate tracks. Granting trade preference means little without
providing countries with the ability to take advantage of those
benefits. We have development assistance that we provide to countries.
We have trade that we do. Let's combine it and recognize that these
trade opportunities can only be taken advantage of if the country has
the capacity to deal with the issues we are talking about.
Capacity building is already underway in Africa. For instance, the
Department of Labor provides capacity-building assistance to AGOA
countries to improve workers' rights through partnerships with a broad
range of organizations, from NGOs, to health organizations, to social
and economic researchers. By providing this aid in a more efficient and
clearly measurable fashion and seeking more input from local
cooperatives and groups, we can help foster more sustainable growth in
Sub-Saharan Africa.
The time to develop consensus on AGOA improvements is now. I hope my
colleagues will join me in supporting and strengthening the AGOA Act so
we can maintain this important tool to increase the trade relations
between the United States and Africa and fight global poverty. I look
forward to seeing the results of next week's meetings with the African
leaders. It is my sincere expectation that these meetings will produce
concrete ways we can improve the ties between Africa and the United
States, and I certainly expect it will help us lead to the improvement
and reauthorization of AGOA.
Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
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The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. FRANKEN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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