[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 138 (Thursday, November 13, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5961-S5962]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE
Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, I note that we are going to have some
discussions between the leaders about the agenda coming up. I would
like to take a few minutes to make it perfectly clear that I think one
of the first steps we need to take to assure voters that we have heard
the message and that I myself have heard that message is to get our
work done on the floor of the Senate.
I am a centrist. I am a proud centrist. The record expresses that I
am a centrist. As I have said a thousand times on the floor and 10,000
times at home, I have been part of the coalition that has helped make
this place work when it did, and I have been part of the coalition that
has tried to make this place work even when it didn't. The record is
clear. I don't have to say more about that.
But yesterday when I arrived in Washington thinking that it would be
a very good time to begin our work and came to the Senate floor, I was
actually very surprised that neither leader on either side--neither
Harry Reid nor Mitch McConnell--was prepared to move us to a vote that
is so obvious that we should do and has been obvious for a long time,
and that vote is on the Keystone Pipeline.
As chair of the energy committee, I moved this out of my committee
months ago--I said I would, and I did--and worked every day that I
could to get this vote up on the Senate floor.
I wish to submit for the Record and talk for a few minutes about it
because I came here at 2:00 yesterday--it has been 24 hours. What a
difference 24 hours can make when a Senator is willing to stand up and
speak and lead. My leadership didn't give me permission to do this.
Nobody asked me to do it. And I waited for Mitch McConnell and John
Cornyn to call for a vote on the Keystone Pipeline, and neither one of
them did.
I would like to read what Leader McConnell said yesterday because at
4:00 he is going to come to the floor and try to convince us he said
something else. But the reporters have the Record, I have the
transcript, and I am going to take just a minute to read it now.
I am going to get to that in just 1 second because I have it, but I
am going to paraphrase it now while the staff brings it to me.
Mitch McConnell came to the floor--and I was here when he spoke, so I
know it pretty well--he came to the floor, and then he took a few bows
for the win, and then he said there is some work we need to do in this
lameduck session. He did not mention the Keystone Pipeline. It is not
in the transcript. He said three things: He said something about the
budget, he said something about retroactive taxes, and he said a third
thing. I will read the transcript into the Record in just a minute.
So I waited patiently, hoping he would say something about the
Keystone Pipeline since it was talked about a lot on the campaign trail
last year, but he didn't. He said that he has his agenda and that it
was clear there were a few things we had to do in the lameduck, but the
Keystone Pipeline wasn't one of them. So I was disappointed.
I had to wait for the second leader on the Republican side, John
Cornyn, to speak. There is a likely transcript that he has--here it is.
Here is the McConnell transcript. This is what Mr. McConnell said
yesterday. This is 24 hours later, after this Senator stood on the
floor and made some pretty pointed
[[Page S5962]]
remarks about the leadership on both sides here. This is 24 hours
later. But this is what Leader McConnell said yesterday:
In the weeks that remain in this Congress, we should work
to accomplish the essential task of funding the Congress and
preventing retroactive tax increases. We must address the
expiring authority passed earlier this session for the
Department of Defense to train and equip moderate, vetted
Syrian opposition, and we must continue to support the
efforts to address the Ebola crisis.
No mention of Keystone. Not one. If I were the leader of the majority
party and came back and said there is some unfinished business, after
talking incessantly about Keystone for the last 6 years, the first
thing I would do is say----
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Ms. LANDRIEU. I ask unanimous consent for 5 more minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Ms. LANDRIEU. We can have a short Thanksgiving break. We don't have
to have a long break for Christmas. The problem is we haven't been
working.
Here is my list. He mentioned three things; Keystone was not on them.
Then, to shorten this, John Cornyn, the Senator from Texas, came to
the floor and he gave a very long list. He did in fact mention
Keystone, but it was in the context of, as soon as we convene again in
January--a long list--we will vote on Keystone.
I came to the floor yesterday and said that was not good enough to
the leader of my leadership and the leadership of the Republican Party
and said: You know what, I would like to vote on Keystone now.
So yesterday, because I gave that speech and because the public wants
us to do this--more than I, the public wants a vote on Keystone and has
wanted it for a long time. The House of Representatives took the bill
that Senator Hoeven and I had drafted, stripped the language of theirs,
which would never have passed the Senate of the United States and would
never have gotten to the President's desk, and put our language in--
like I would be upset about that. I am not upset about that. I am happy
about that. I am grateful that I was able yesterday, in 3 hours, to
move the leadership of the Democrats in the Senate, the leadership of
the Republicans in the Senate, the Republican leadership in the House
to get a vote on Keystone on Tuesday.
So I am going to come back and say more about this, but for the
reporters who are not used to people being as direct as I am being now,
go read the transcript for yourselves so when they call press
conferences later today and claim victory, please remember who was on
this floor talking about it. Mitch McConnell didn't mention it--the
transcript is right here--did not mention the word ``Keystone.'' John
Cornyn mentioned the word ``amnesty'' several times and ``Keystone''
once. I am the Senator who came to this floor as chair of the energy
committee to say: Let's get our business done; let's start now. And
that is what we are going to do. I am glad we are going to be voting
very soon.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Georgia.
Mr. CHAMBLISS. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for
up to 3 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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