[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 141 (Tuesday, November 18, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S6029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE
Mr. McCONNELL. On an entirely different matter, later today the
Senate will vote on whether to send Congressman Cassidy's Keystone jobs
bill to the President. It is a vote that is long overdue but certainly
welcome. Keystone XL is just common sense. It is a shovel-ready jobs
project that would help thousands of Americans find work. It would
increase our supply of North American energy. It would do all of that
with minimal net climate impact. That is why the American people
support it. That is why Republicans support it. That is why so many
rank-and-file Democrats support it too.
I wish the Senate would have followed the lead of Congressman Cassidy
and his House colleagues in approving Keystone years ago. It is just
common sense. Those who took a serious look at the science and the
potential benefits reached that conclusion long ago. They understand
that the whole drama over Keystone has been as protracted as it has
been unnecessary. We hope to turn the page on all of that today.
The reason we are able to have this vote is because the American
people sent a strong message earlier this month. They told us they just
want Washington to get on with approving serious policies such as
Keystone and then move on. That is why after years of delay and so many
thwarted attempts to bring Keystone up for a vote, the Democratic
leadership is finally, after 6 years, allowing us to vote on passage of
the Cassidy Keystone bill. That is a good thing. It is a step forward.
Now it will be up to our friends on the other side to vote with us and
actually pass the Cassidy Keystone bill through Congress.
The President's remarks opposing this bipartisan legislation are
certainly not helpful. Republicans are committed to getting Keystone
approved. We want to see those jobs created as soon as possible. That
is what the people want. The House already acted long ago, and
Congressman Cassidy and his colleagues, such as Senator Hoeven, who is
here on the floor, deserve recognition for their years of hard work on
this issue.
So I would urge a ``yes'' vote on the legislation to send Congressman
Cassidy's Keystone bill to the President and create more American jobs.
If not, then a new majority, after the beginning of the year, will be
taking this matter up and sending it down to the President.
I also wish to take a moment to thank the Senator from North Dakota
for his persistence on this issue for literally years.
Without his leadership I don't know where we would be. I just want to
extend my gratitude to him for his great work on this matter.
I yield the floor.
Mr. LEAHY. Would the Republican leader yield for a question?
The minority leader will not yield for a question, but I would note,
based on his concerns about the bipartisan piece of legislation
regarding the NSA and others and his concern about ISIL--which we all
share--that the NSA and all of our intelligence community had every
single tool the Republican leader advocates for, while ISIL built up
its strength, while ISIL had Iraq's army flee from them while they went
forward. With every single one of those elements the Republican leader
advocates for, there was not one single alarm bell that rang. So let's
deal with the facts and not hypotheses.
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