[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 36 (Tuesday, March 3, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H1558-H1562]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BLUE DOG COALITION
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Curbelo of Florida). Under the Speaker's
announced policy of January 6, 2015, the gentleman from California (Mr.
Costa) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority
leader.
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, my name is Congressman Jim Costa from Fresno,
California. Since I was first elected over 10 years ago, I have been a
member of the Blue Dog caucus. This afternoon, members of the Blue Dog
caucus that stretch the width and the breadth of this great country of
ours are going to speak about what brings us together, about the
passions that they have and the people that they advocate for and why
they believe that their efforts at being a constructive and a very
positive member of the Blue Dog caucus adds value to their ability to
represent their constituencies and to the vision that I think we, as
Americans, all share together, which is to make our Congress, to make
our representative democracy, a more functioning system. Because
clearly today, the American public, in poll after poll after poll,
demonstrate their frustration with the inability of the United States
Congress to come together and to work on common solutions for our
country, solutions that share our common values but also involve the
art, the art of the political compromise, too often I believe an art
that has become lost here in our Nation's Capital in Washington, D.C.
So among the first of the members of our caucus that will speak is
the gentlewoman from Arizona's Ninth District, Kyrsten Sinema, a
colleague of mine who always is advocating for her constituency in the
most positive ways.
Ms. SINEMA. Thank you, Mr. Costa, and thank you today for organizing
this Special Order.
Mr. Speaker, this is an important opportunity for us to come together
and show how bipartisanship can fix our broken system.
At home in Arizona, I hear from everyone that Washington is broken.
There is too much time spent playing political games and too little
time spent working together to get things done. Most people are sick
and tired of Congress' failing to do its job because of partisan
politics. That is why I joined the Blue Dog Coalition, because they
prioritize the people they represent more than their party leadership.
Everybody knows that Congress is not working effectively, and the
Blue Dogs are trying to change that. They are focused on ending
political polarization, reforming Congress, stopping reckless
government spending, and creating economic opportunity for Americans
who have been left behind by this recession.
Mr. Speaker, I come to work every single day to get things done for
Arizona. I have a proven record of reaching out to members of both
political parties to find common ground on issues ranging from jobs and
the economy to reducing spending and government waste. As a cofounder
of the United Solutions Caucus and a No Labels Problem Solver, I have
worked with members of both parties to get things done. At home,
Congressman Matt Salmon and I work together to help Arizona veterans
get the care they deserve, and I have worked with Congressman Michael
McCaul to introduce legislation that puts an end to automatic pay
raises for Members of Congress.
Neither party is always right. In fact, both parties are often wrong.
It is time for us to listen to each other and work together to grow our
economy, help our country's families, and honor our veterans. Recently,
we came together to pass bipartisan legislation to prevent veteran
suicide and improve access to mental health care and health services
for veterans. Just this week, we agreed on legislation to expand
college savings plans and make higher education a reality for students
and their families. We need more of these kinds of accomplishments in
Congress.
In Arizona, the voters established an independent redistricting
commission that allows for an open and transparent process and creates
competitive districts where neither party has a monopoly. We Blue Dogs
have proposed similar reforms to create impartial, fairly drawn
districts across the country to cut back on the polarization that
cripples our system.
Mr. Speaker, the American people deserve leaders who do whatever it
takes to come up with practical, commonsense solutions that help us
move forward. It is time for us to focus on areas of common ground and
come up with real answers to our country's most pressing problems. So
let's put aside the finger pointing and the fighting. Let's roll up our
sleeves and get back to work.
Mr. COSTA. I thank the gentlewoman from Arizona.
Mr. Speaker, our next Blue Dog colleague who will speak is a
gentleman whom I have served with both in the California State
Legislature as well as here in Congress. He and I are good friends. We
both represent wonderful parts of California, and he is one of the
longer serving members in the Blue Dog caucus, the gentleman from
northern California, Congressman Mike Thompson from California's Fifth
District.
Mr. THOMPSON of California. I thank the gentleman, and my friend, for
yielding.
Mr. Speaker, Members, I came down to the floor this afternoon to join
my Blue Dog colleagues in calling for all of us in Congress to come
together and do the work that we have been asked to do, the work that
we have been sent to Washington, sent to Congress to do on behalf of
the people that we represent. I came to Congress to get things done, to
get things done for the people that I represent, and to get things done
for the great country that we are all so privileged to live in and to
participate in.
As Mr. Costa mentioned, he and I served together in the State
legislature in California, and I am very proud of the work that we did
there. We were able to get a lot of things done. In the time that I was
there, the majority of the time, I chaired the Senate Budget Committee.
That was one of the reasons why I was so proud to be a Blue Dog,
although the common thread that holds all Blue Dogs together is the
issue of fiscal responsibility.
In my time in Sacramento chairing the Budget Committee, we always had
a balanced budget. Fiscal responsibility was important, and it is
equally as important here in Congress. Nobody likes the fact that we
have huge deficits or huge debts. We understand that some things are
unavoidable, but there has to be an understanding of and an intentional
effort on the part of all us to make sure that we are fiscally
responsible and that we manage that debt, we manage that deficit, and
we bring it down to a level that won't burden our children and our
grandchildren in the years to come.
So I was stunned when I came to Congress and found out that it was
very, very difficult to get anything done, to get people to work
together. As Jim pointed out, I am one of the longer serving Members,
so I was stunned a long time ago in what you can probably refer to
today as ``the good old days,'' when we were actually able to work
together and get things done, but we didn't have a high level of that
cooperation even back then.
Last week, I was with the Aspen Institute on a trade conference.
Anybody who is familiar with them knows that they are able to bring
together a bipartisan and bicameral representation of Congress, Members
from the Senate and Members from the House, Democrats and Republicans.
They also bring together some of the most famous scholars to talk about
whatever the issue of the conference is. I was struck, at this trade
conference, when one of the new Members that we serve with, now
starting his sophomore term, after the scholars spoke and he was
recognized, said: I came to Congress to involve myself in this type of
problem solving, when people came together, talked about issues, talked
about problems, and talked about solutions. He said: And this is the
first time since I have been here that we have been able to engage in
that type of dialogue.
That is not right, Members, and we all know that. We are here to work
on
[[Page H1559]]
the problems that face our great country, and we need to get down and
do that work.
Mr. COSTA. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. THOMPSON of California. I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. COSTA. I appreciate your explaining your experience in the
California Legislature because we not only worked together in a
bipartisan fashion, but we also worked together with the lower house
and the State senate, because you could never get anything done if you
didn't work together with both houses. Of course, that is part of our
problem here today.
Mr. THOMPSON of California. Mr. Speaker, the gentleman is correct.
That is how the legislative process works. You don't just punt
something over to the other Chamber and then say, ``We have done our
job''; because you haven't done your job until the President, in the
case of Congress, signs his name on the line making that bill or that
job come to fruition, making it the law.
You are right. In the State capitol, we did that. We knew we had to
work together because the same piece of legislation had to pass both
houses and had to meet there for the Governor's signature in order to
become law. The same thing happens here.
I know it can be done. One of the things that I did in some of my
earlier years here, Mr. Speaker, is I was successful in getting a
wilderness bill passed, a wilderness bill that protected into
perpetuity 350,000 acres in my district in California. Wilderness bills
have passed before, so that, in itself, was not the biggest thing that
has ever happened here. But I am particularly proud because I was in
the minority then.
The chair of Natural Resources was Richard Pombo from California,
someone whom I consider a friend, although not a political ally. He was
not someone who was favorable to approving wilderness legislation. But
I worked with him and his committee. He had the bill up in for a
markup. We had it on the floor. We passed it. I compromised; he
compromised. That bill went through the House. The companion bill went
through the Senate, as Mr. Costa was explaining has to be done, and it
went to then-President George W. Bush, who signed it into law.
So it is incongruent with the way we work today. Today you would just
start by saying: An unfriendly chairman, an unfriendly President, we
can't get anything done. That is just absolutely not true.
If we come together and if we work together, we can find solutions to
the problems that we face. There are any number of issues that need to
come together and need to be put on this floor for a vote. You can look
at immigration reform, tax reform, gun violence prevention, and
certainly one that everyone can agree with is an infrastructure bill.
{time} 1630
There is not a person that any one of us represents who doesn't know
that we need to invest in America's infrastructure--in our roads, in
our highways, in our broadband, in our overpasses, in our bridges. And
now with the new Panama Canal coming on line and the bigger ships
coming into this country, we have huge investments that need to be made
in our ports and our harbors. These are investments that not only put
Americans to work generating more revenue, but put better jobs and make
our economy stronger than it has ever been before.
I submit, Members, that these are things that we can do. As has been
said before, the things that bring us together, the things that bring
us together as Americans, are far greater than the things that divide
us. I will plead, let's get together, let's roll up our sleeves, let's
work together on addressing the major issues that face America.
I thank you, Mr. Costa, for bringing us here today.
Mr. COSTA. I thank the Congressman from California.
Congressman Mike Thompson, I think, expressly indicated why he is a
Blue Dog and, over the years, his efforts to bridge the gap, to reach
across the aisle, to get something done; because he recognizes, as do
all of us Blue Dogs, that the political dysfunction that is occurring
here in our Nation's Capital is real. It has measurable costs, and it
is preventing our country, sadly, from solving the problems that our
constituents send us here to solve, whether it is the economic recovery
that could be stronger, whether it is fixing our Nation's deficit,
whether it is fixing a broken immigration system, or an array of other
issues that are pressing, that are important to the people back home.
The next gentleman who would like to address our Congress is the
gentleman from the great State of Illinois, Congressman Dan Lipinski,
my colleague and classmate from Illinois' Third District.
Mr. LIPINSKI. Mr. Speaker, I thank Mr. Costa for putting this
together today.
The reason I came to Congress, the reason I ran for Congress, was to
get things done. I think that is what all our constituents are
expecting us to do.
Unfortunately, when I am at home, I am constantly reminded that my
constituents are wondering why we don't get more done, what is
happening in Washington. When I am shopping at Menards or at Jewel,
people come up to me and say: Why can't everyone work together there in
Washington?
They know that I have been doing that. That is why I am part of the
Blue Dog coalition, because we want to bring people together here in
Washington--in the House, the Senate--bring everyone together to work
out the many, many problems that our Nation has.
We just had Mr. Thompson talking about a transportation bill.
Everyone talks about the need to fix our transportation infrastructure.
We have roads and bridges that are crumbling. Our public transit also
has infrastructure that is crumbling. We all need a good transportation
system to get wherever we need to go during the day.
Our Nation, for the sake of having an efficient economy, needs a good
transportation system. We can put people to work immediately fixing our
transportation system, yet we haven't been able to come together to
solve this problem. That is one thing that we need to do, and it is
something I think that we can do.
We have just seen all the trouble that we had run into here with the
Homeland Security bill, an issue that should be easy. We all want to
protect our homeland. We all know the threats that we are facing. And
although we may have disagreements on many issues, protecting our
Nation is not one of those. Yet, unfortunately, we do run into issues,
and we really need to instead focus on what can we work together on and
what is possible.
We have a divided government now. It used to be that after an
election, everyone would come together, look around and say: Okay. This
is who is the majority in the House, the majority in the Senate, who is
in the White House. What can we agree upon? How can we work together to
solve problems? Where can we find our agreement? Instead, we seem to
focus on how our party can get control of everything in the next
election. Mr. Speaker, this is not the way that the American people
want us to work. They want us to come together.
Now, some of the previous speakers talked about electoral reform and
redistricting reform. Those can certainly help. Those are things that
we support and that the Blue Dogs are working to get done. But even
before we get those things done, we can work together and accomplish
great things here. The American people aren't demanding that of us.
They are demanding that we change the way that Washington is working
right now. That is what the Blue Dogs are doing.
That is the only way we are going to be able to face so many of the
problems that we face, including the issue that is really at the heart
of the Blue Dogs, has always been, and continues to be: dealing with
our fiscal situation. We need to be fiscally responsible. The American
people understand this. They know we need to make the tough choices
here in Washington to get our fiscal House in order.
The Blue Dogs have always led on that. We continue to lead on that,
but it is going to take bipartisan cooperation to get that done because
we have a divided government. But we need to do it. We need to take
care of these issues. The Blue Dogs continue to work on these things.
We really need the support of everyone to come together
[[Page H1560]]
here in Washington and across the country to solve these great problems
that we have, that we face.
Mr. Speaker, I am sure there are people who may be out there watching
this on C-SPAN, and probably a lot of people who are just so happy to
finally turn on C-SPAN and hear people talking about working together,
not talking about what is wrong with the other side, how I am right and
the other side is wrong, but the need to work together. That is what
the Blue Dogs are about. That is what it continues to be about, and
that is the way that we are going to make America the greatest Nation
on the face of the Earth--but a Nation that faces, as we all
understand, many issues, many problems, just as our families are facing
many issues right now. By working together, we can make our Nation even
greater, and only by working together will we get there.
I am very happy to join my Blue Dog colleagues here tonight and every
day working to help make America a better place to live. So let us all
come together, Mr. Speaker, and work on some of these problems.
``Compromise,'' I know, sometimes is a dirty word. You don't have to
give up your principles to compromise. Stick to your principles, but
compromise. Get done what we can get done, and make this Nation a
greater place.
I thank my Blue Dog colleagues very much. Thank you, Mr. Costa, for
this. We are going to continue to bring the message to the American
people and get things done.
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the gentleman from Illinois,
my classmate, for his good words. Clearly, I think he speaks on behalf
of not only the Blue Dogs, but the majority of Americans who believe
that we need to be working together to solve problems, whether it is
our budget, our fiscal deficit, or whether it is our transportation
system, as the gentleman from Illinois so succinctly pointed out. It
can never be ``my way or the highway,'' because if that is the case, we
will never get anything done, as has been witnessed here for the last
couple of months. But when we do work together, as the compromised
bipartisan vote that we saw this afternoon on Homeland Security, we can
get something done.
My next friend and colleague is the gentleman from Georgia,
Congressman Sanford Bishop, from the Second District. He has
distinguished himself over the years and has been a member of not only
the Blue Dog caucus, but he represents some of the best parts of
Georgia--Fort Benning and agriculture, like I represent.
Sanford, we are glad to have you here this afternoon to tell us the
thoughts of the people of Georgia's Second District on the terrific job
you do on their behalf.
Mr. BISHOP of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for putting
together this Special Order, and I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Martin Luther King, Jr., once said: ``Ultimately a genuine leader is
not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.''
Debate is a natural consequence of representative democracy.
Gridlock, on the other hand, is not.
Sitting down with those across the aisle is not just an act of
placing faith in political or ideological adversaries, but an act of
placing faith in our egalitarian democratic system, a system, as it
was, founded on the art of creating consensus in order to move forward.
All of us here speaking from the well this hour believe in working
together for better government, working for responsible government,
working for transparent government. The moderate Blue Dogs are here not
only to find common ground between lawmakers, but to forge an
understanding of what it is to truly work together.
The Blue Dog Coalition is dedicated to a core set of beliefs that
transcend partisan politics. We represent the center of the House of
Representatives and appeal to the mainstream values of the American
public. The coalition develops substantive proposals and positions
distinct from those advocated by the extremes in both parties. Needless
to say, we Blue Dogs are less swayed by the leadership of either party
and more persuaded by the needs and the concerns of mainstream
Americans.
But this is nothing new. Twenty years ago, the Blue Dog Coalition was
formed following the 1994 election. Over the past 20 years, many of our
proposals have been praised as fair, responsible, and positive
additions to a Congressional environment too often marked as partisan
and antagonistic.
Throughout those years, the Blue Dogs have been dedicated to solving
problems based on five principles of political leadership: tell the
truth; govern for the future; put the country first; be responsible;
work together.
My job is to represent the interests and the values of the people in
my district in middle and southwest Georgia. As a Blue Dog Democrat, I
push for commonsense measures that will make government work better for
my constituents.
The people of Georgia's Second Congressional District, like all
Americans, deserve a government that puts their needs ahead of partisan
politics. We seek to use the legislative process to create a higher,
better quality of life for all of our citizens. Eliminating government
waste and inefficiency are crucial to achieving this goal.
We work with our colleagues on the right and the left, on both sides
of the aisle, to pass commonsense reforms that will make government
work for the people of our great Nation. As Members of Congress, it is
our responsibility to ensure that government works for the American
people.
I am committed to working together with my colleagues to pass
legislation that eliminates Federal waste and inefficiency. If we can
do this, it will give us a better chance at getting things done. That
is how we rebuild trust with the American people, by showing them that
we are doing the job we were sent here to do.
Today, many folks might suppose that bipartisanship is dead. The Blue
Dogs have been here and are still here to say that it is not dead. We
are committed to working--not to finger point, not to fight, but to
fix. I believe that problem solving together across both sides of the
aisle we can make that happen.
So I am delighted that my colleague, Mr. Costa, and my colleagues
from the Blue Dog Coalition have come together with this Special Order
so that we can say to each other, say to the American people, that we
cry out for a government that will work for the people to get the
needs, the common goals, the common hopes, and their common aspirations
addressed.
We may have differences, but we have more similarities than we have
differences. If we find those common denominators of experience that
combine us, we can get the job done for the American people.
I thank you for this time.
{time} 1645
Mr. COSTA. Congressman Bishop, my friend, I could not have said it
better: for the people and by the people.
Mr. Speaker, for those who are watching on C-SPAN this afternoon, we
welcome your input, and we welcome your comments. For those of you who
are interested, please sign onto our Web site, which is www.bluedog
.schrader.house.gov, as a way by which you can communicate with us. We
all have our Web sites. Obviously, not only our constituents from our
respective districts but people from throughout the country, we would
urge you to weigh in. Let us know how you feel, which is an appropriate
segue for our next speaker.
The Blue Dogs every 2 years select three leaders to represent them
and to organize our agenda. We have a policy individual who will be
speaking in a moment, Congressman Jim Cooper. We have the
communications director, which is the position I serve, and then we
have our chairperson. Our chairperson is a gentleman whom I have the
honor and privilege to serve with. He is my friend, and he is doing an
excellent job, the gentleman from Oregon's Fifth District,
Representative Kurt Schrader.
Mr. SCHRADER. Thank you very, very much. I want to thank my friend,
the gentleman from California, for hosting this particular Special
Order.
Mr. Speaker, I think it is important for America to realize that we
all don't hate one another. We actually get along pretty well on a
personal level, and there are those of us on both sides of the aisle
who want to work together to solve our country's problems. You have
heard a little bit about that already.
[[Page H1561]]
I think, at this time, more than ever, it is important for Congress
to come together. The little debate we had last week or a week and a
half ago on the Department of Homeland Security, I think, drives that
point home. Oftentimes, within families, there are disagreements.
Whether it is a Republican family or a Democratic family, we are not
going to agree on all of the issues all of the time. That doesn't make
one side wrong and the other side right. What it does mean is there is
an honest difference of opinion. In the way our forefathers set the
system up, we are supposed to work through that. There are checks and
balances. No one party, no one Chamber, no one individual is supposed
to have ultimate veto over the rights of everyday, Main Street
Americans.
What we in the Blue Dog Coalition try to do is to bridge those
differences, to provide a forum to find ways to agree, not to disagree
with the other team. As for the Homeland Security bill, whatever you
think about some of the attachments to the bill or about some of the
actions by the President of the United States, it is important to fund
Homeland Security more now than ever. With the stuff that has gone on
overseas that could possibly threaten our own shores, it makes it
imperative that we work together. I am actually proud, despite the
sausage-making look of it in the media and, perhaps, to a lot of
Americans, that there were Republicans and Democrats who came together
to solve that problem.
We will live to fight another day on immigration reform and on some
of the other issues which we have genuine, legitimate differences of
opinion on, but it should not be lost on the American people that it
was Democrats and Republicans coming together to solve a very basic
problem that our Congress and Nation are charged to solve, which is to
provide for the security of the American people.
The Blue Dogs have been doing this for years. You heard of our
inception after the 1994 elections, when the Blue Dogs felt we were
getting choked. We were regular Southern Democrats, if you will, at
that time. It has branched out, like Mr. Costa has indicated, to
include the whole country now. Yellow Dog Democrats were getting
``choked blue'' by their rather liberal leadership that they felt did
not respect or, frankly, represent some of their interests, so out of
that came the Blue Dogs.
The body has grown and decreased in numbers with every election
cycle. There has been a consistent drumbeat, however, for folks like us
in moderate districts, not just on the Democratic side, but on the
Republican side. We actually have quarterly meetings with a Republican
group called the Tuesday Group, where we try and get together and share
ideas about things we can work together on--not in opposition to but
work together on. Boy, I wish leadership would work in that same vein.
We would be a lot better off.
Mr. COSTA. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. SCHRADER. I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. COSTA. We have talked a lot about this among our fellow Blue
Dogs, but I think the point that you raise there is worth repeating
because, frankly, I think there are a lot of Members on both sides of
the aisle who, if they had the opportunity, would like to figure out
how they could work together. I know, as the chair of the Blue Dog
Caucus, it is your desire to reach out and continue to make that
effort. I just want to applaud you for that.
I also want to ask: Are there other ways in which constituents can
make their Congresspeople feel more comfortable about doing that? With
this notion of ``it is my way or the highway,'' I think the majority of
my constituents wonder what is going on there. I mean, ``What are you
folks thinking in Washington? because that is not the way we do it at
home.''
Mr. SCHRADER. In reclaiming my time, I totally agree with the
gentleman from California.
I think, sometimes, there is that bubble we operate under here in
Washington, D.C., and we forget that the people back home, frankly, are
sometimes not watching C-SPAN. They are busy trying to put food on
their tables, seeing if their kids can get great educations. Frankly,
in recent times, they are just trying to keep their bloody jobs. So I
think it is important for us to relate to the people who are paying our
salaries. This is their Chamber--this is their building--not a bubble
of Washington, D.C., types. It is important for us to sit down and
represent what they are talking about.
When I went home in this last election cycle and, frankly, in every
election cycle, the big issue for Americans in the Congressional Fifth
District in the great State of Oregon--the Willamette Valley-central
Oregon coast--is not any one issue. It is: ``Will you please work
together.'' This is complicated stuff--some of these bills are pretty
darned complicated--but I think everyday Americans understand. ``Okay.
That is why I hired you. Work it out. Figure it out.'' To their credit,
they don't give me a lot of room for excuses.
``Well, gee. I am not in the majority. I don't control it.''
``Kurt, I elected you. I want you to figure out a way of how to work
with folks.''
We can do that. The farm bill in the last Congress was a classic
example of how we actually worked together, Republicans and Democrats.
You could not tell a Democrat or a Republican based on what they were
talking about, because they were representing different districts,
different geographies around this country, lobbying hard for their
farming interests or nutritional programs that they felt passionately
about. That is the way Congress is supposed to work. That is what the
Blue Dog Coalition is all about--building those relationships.
If you have noticed in the 114th Congress, in the first 2 months,
while DHS, the Affordable Care Act, and sometimes choice or abortion
have gotten a lot of the headlines from the media, I would urge you to
look at the votes for the big, important bills that have come forward.
There are a number of bills that leadership--and I give the Republican
leadership credit for this--brought forward that moderate Democrats had
voted for in past Congresses or had expressed interest in, and they got
overwhelming and sometimes significant Democrat support. That is not
talked about by the media, folks.
You have got to realize that there are many opportunities like that
that go below the radar screen. It may not be the sexiest topic in the
world, but it is stuff like making sure the Affordable Care Act works,
making sure that small businesses are able to function properly, making
sure that the Dodd-Frank financial reform actually is workable and
respects the interests of the different members of the community out
there, even the Keystone vote. I mean, we have to be thoughtful about
it, and Democrats and Republicans need to work together and find areas
they can agree on. We have tried to do that time and again. It is the
heartbeat of the Blue Dog Coalition.
Basically, what we are standing for, as you have heard, is fiscal
reform and fiscal responsibility. It has been a hallmark of the Blue
Dogs over the last 20 years. We are generally a government efficiency
organization. We believe government is not evil, but it could sure work
a heck of a lot better. Every one of the folks out there in America
understands that some government rule is making a problem for them, and
it shouldn't have to happen. We as Blue Dogs try and cut through that
government regulation.
We are also business friendly. Yes, Democrats can be business
friendly, believe it or not. They are called ``Blue Dogs.'' There is
another group called New Democrats. There is another group growing
outside this that wants to include all Americans, which is called No
Labels. Most Blue Dogs are, frankly, members of No Labels. There is
another group that works together, Democrats and Republicans. Yes,
folks. There are a lot of different people in this Congress who are
very interested in trying to work together to make your Congress work
and deal with your lunch bucket issues that mean the most to you--job
creation, educational reform, infrastructure--as was alluded to. These
are values, I think, every American holds dear, and those are the
issues we should be working on.
Senator Lieberman said at one point that it is kind of ironic that
everyone is interested in bipartisanship, but if you don't agree with
somebody 100 percent of the time, you don't agree with them any of the
time. The real world is: life is complicated, and you are
[[Page H1562]]
going to have times when you agree and times when you disagree. One of
the basic axioms of politics is: you don't have enemies or friends; you
have allies and adversaries at the end of the day because issues change
over time, and you will find that the ebb and flow of interests will
conflate with party, geography--all of those issues.
The Blue Dog Coalition is dedicated to trying to bring people
together across this country--Republicans and Democrats, business
interests, individuals--trying to make your government more responsible
and more efficient with electoral reform, congressional reform, getting
back in this great, august Chamber to regular order--to where your
interests are represented through the committees, through the elected
Representatives you have. That is what is important here, and that
binds Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives and
moderates, like us. That is the hallmark of the Blue Dog Coalition.
I won't belabor the point. I thank the gentleman for bringing us to
the floor here. I think it is important for America to be a little
inspired that there are people who care about this country, who cut
through the partisan politics and even go against our respective
leaderships to try and solve the problems you want us to solve. I
think, at the end of the day, that is where America is. To get back to
a greatness, which was alluded to before, it is going to require more
members of the Blue Dog Coalition and of the Tuesday Group on the other
side of the aisle to be elected to Congress and hope America gets mad
as hell and starts to hold their Members accountable for working
together and making America great again.
Mr. COSTA. I want to thank the gentleman from Oregon for his
leadership as the chair of the Blue Dog Coalition.
Your efforts to reach out to the Tuesday Group and to the No Labels
Caucus and your efforts to take difficult positions and cast hard
votes, I think, are all examples of political profiles in courage, and
we commend you for your leadership and your efforts.
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