[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 31 (Tuesday, February 24, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H1089-H1090]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
2015 FUNDING FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
[[Page H1090]]
California (Ms. Roybal-Allard) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROYBAL-ALLARD. Mr. Speaker, in December of 2014, as leverage
against the President's immigration executive order, the Republican
leadership irresponsibly decided to hold hostage the 2015 funding for
the Department of Homeland Security.
We are now 147 days in fiscal year 2015, just 4 days away from
February 28, when the continuing resolution currently funding the
Department will expire. The serious consequence of inaction by the
Republican leadership is that it will leave the Department without the
funds needed to effectively fulfill its mission of protecting our
homeland.
It is unbelievable that given the urgency of our national security,
House Republicans continue failing to put forward a realistic plan to
fund the Department of Homeland Security.
Mistakenly, some Republicans believe the Department is doing just
fine under the continuing resolution. Some even say it is okay to let
DHS funding expire. Other Republicans suggest the preliminary Texas
district court injunction, which blocks implementation of the
President's executive action on immigration, is reason enough to
continue holding hostage the funding for Homeland Security.
These are dangerously wrong conclusions. Secretary Johnson and agency
heads have warned that if the CR is allowed to expire, national
security operations will be disrupted, and essential personnel will be
required to work without pay. They also warn passing another CR will
not address the uncertainty of being able to meet our long-term
national security needs.
Our national security cannot wait for the unrelated issue of the
President's executive actions on immigration to work its way through
the judicial process which, at best, is likely to take several months.
By contrast, Democrats have a responsible solution. Two weeks ago,
Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Nita Lowey and I introduced
H.R. 861. It is a clean appropriations bill that funds the Department
of Homeland Security for the remainder of fiscal year 2015. It is not a
Democratic bill. If it were, it would more closely reflect Democratic
priorities.
Rather, H.R. 861 contains the precise language of the November 2014
bipartisan bill negotiated in good faith by chairs and ranking members
of the House and Senate Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittees.
This is the bill that was intended to be part of the 2015 omnibus
legislation that funded the rest of the Federal Government. It is the
bill that will enable the Department of Homeland Security to address
our Nation's current and most pressing security needs.
I am pleased that H.R. 861 is cosponsored by every Democrat in the
House, and we urge our Republican colleagues to join us.
{time} 1230
This bipartisan, bicameral bill will pass the House, pass the Senate,
and be signed into law by the President. All it needs is for the
Republican leadership to bring the bill to the floor for a vote.
Surely our Nation need not experience attacks like those in Paris and
Copenhagen before we show our resolve to fund our Department of
Homeland Security. Let us not wait around and hope Senate Republicans
do the responsible thing.
House Republicans should lead by bringing H.R. 861 for a vote and
making it clear to the American people that our Nation's security takes
priority over political and unrelated policy debates. Failure to do so
and letting funding for Homeland Security expire or taking the easy way
out by kicking a viable solution down the road with a continuing
resolution represents a failure in fulfilling our most basic
responsibility as Members of Congress: to protect the American people
and our country from harm.
Let's pass H.R. 861 today.
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