[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 69 (Thursday, May 7, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2726-S2727]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENSURING TAX EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS THE RIGHT TO APPEAL ACT--MOTION TO
PROCEED--Continued
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CORNYN. Thank you, Mr. President.
Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act
Before my colleagues leave the floor, let me just offer my
congratulations to the Senator from Tennessee and the Senator from
Maryland, who have shepherded this important piece of legislation, the
Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act, across the Senate floor.
I think we are all reminded every time we take up some consensus
legislation and find all the traps and obstacles to passage that this
is not an easy process. But it was not designed to be easy. It was
designed to force consensus before a bill actually is passed into law.
Thanks to the patience and the tenacity of our colleague from Tennessee
and our colleague from Maryland, we have done that today, and I thank
them very much for that.
This legislation guarantees that Congress will have the opportunity
and the time to scrutinize any agreement reached between the
administration and the P5+1 nations with regard to Iran's nuclear
program. This is to my mind the single greatest threat--not only to
regional peace but to world peace--and that is the prospect of an
Iranian nuclear program, a nuclear weapon.
This bill prohibits the President from lifting sanctions that
Congress has worked on for so long during this period of time. That is
another important feature. But the most important part of this is the
fact that Congress will have the right to vote for or against any
change in the status quo when it comes to Iran. This bill will serve as
a congressional check if there is a bad deal with Iran, and it will
allow the American people through their elected representatives to
consider carefully whether this potential agreement is a good one.
I have been amazed to read in the newspaper and to see on TV that the
President has negotiated a deal. When one asks to read the deal, you
find out there is no deal. There is a so-called framework. But if a
deal is reached between our negotiating team negotiating with Iran and
the P5+1 countries, then Congress will have an opportunity--and through
us the American people will have the opportunity--to read it and to
understand it. We will have the opportunity then to debate it, and as I
said, we will have the opportunity then to vote up or down on this deal
once a deal is struck, if a deal is struck.
But I wonder sometimes about the naivete of the administration when
it comes to negotiating with the world's foremost State sponsor of
international terror. This is a regime that has been killing
Americans--mainly by proxy--since the early 1980s. Of course we should
not and we cannot trust Iran to do the right thing. It makes it even
more necessary for Congress to put all aspects of any deal under a
microscope, as we will.
While the President has been negotiating this vague and convoluted
framework, the Iranian regime has done nothing to earn the trust of the
American people or our allies. Just the opposite is true. Iran has only
proven that it is untrustworthy and that it will stop at nothing to
further its influence throughout the Middle East at the expense of the
United States and our allies.
You don't have to look any further than the New York Times to find a
relevant example of Iran's doublespeak--speaking out of both sides of
its mouth. Just last month in a New York Times op-ed, Iran's Foreign
Minister argued that the United States and the P5+1 countries should
reach a final agreement in order to promote the stability and security
of the region.
The Foreign Minister, Mohammad Zarif, wrote of the need for ``a
regional dialogue'' to ``promote understanding . . . on a broad
spectrum of issues,'' among them, ``ensuring freedom of navigation and
the free flow of oil and other resources. . . . ''
Well, this very article proves that to think we can negotiate with
Iran in good faith is pure fiction. Just this past week, it was
reported that U.S. Navy warships have had to accompany British and
American commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, an
international shipping lane that links the Indian Ocean and the Persian
Gulf, after the Iranian navy seized a commercial vessel last week.
Reports of another naval scuffle between the United States and Iran
was reported yesterday just off the coast of Yemen. Is this how Iran
has been working to ensure freedom of navigation in this region?
Well, of course this is just one example of Iran's most recent
deceptive tactics. This is the kind of regime that has been, as I said,
on our State Department's list as the lead State for sponsorship of
terrorism since 1984.
Now the Obama administration seeks to cut a deal with the regime, a
country that publicly admits wanting to destroy Israel and to build its
empire and influence in places such as war-torn Syria and Iraq. The
Obama administration's framework does nothing to hold Iran accountable
for its proxy wars or for this type of regional adventurism. Even more
concerning, this ambiguous understanding that the President released
last month would abandon longstanding U.S. policy of preventing a
nuclear-armed Iran and replace it with a feeble plan to contain it.
I remember, as the Presiding Officer no doubt remembers, Prime
Minister Netanyahu was just here a few weeks ago. He said that rather
than prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, this framework would
pave the path toward a nuclear Iran. The deal also forces the American
people to trust the Iranian leadership with threshold nuclear
capabilities, without allowing for adequate inspections of all of
Iran's nuclear sites by international agencies, both civilian and
military. This is unacceptable and dangerous. It also underscores why
this legislation that we just passed is so important.
This legislation is vitally important because it is a congressional
backstop against an Iranian regime that is well known for its lies and
international deception. Guaranteeing the time and the opportunity for
Congress to scrutinize this misguided deal is essential. Providing the
American people with the kind of transparency they deserve to
understand what has been negotiated on their behalf is absolutely
critical.
America's elected representatives must be able to get every and any
detail on this emerging deal. That is one reason why I think this
legislation is so important. We need the time and space to review it.
This bill provides for that. It gives us an opportunity to understand
its terms and debate its implications.
I am encouraged by the vote we just had, a near unanimous vote on
this legislation. This is important because this President has shown a
predisposition
[[Page S2727]]
to try to go it alone, not only in foreign affairs and national
security matters but on immigration, health care, and the like.
It is past time for Congress to stand up and tell the President that
he cannot act alone. Our Constitution contemplates three coequal
branches of government, and Congress on behalf of the American people
cannot be frozen out of the debate and the decisionmaking when it comes
to something as important as an Iranian nuclear negotiation.
I see another Senator ready to speak.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Carolina.
National Day of Prayer and Solving Problems in Our Communities
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, today is the National Day of Prayer. It is
a day where we as a nation have an opportunity simply to get on our
knees and ask God for Divine intervention and ask the Lord for help.
Our Nation is, indeed, an amazing nation, a great nation, a nation
with a destiny. I think it is important for us to take the time to
remind ourselves, as part of the foundation of this very Nation, that
there is a foundation of faith.
As I think about that foundation of faith and the need for prayer, it
is hard not to remember that the last year has proven to be a difficult
time for low-income communities and minority communities throughout
this country. It is time for us to have a national conversation about
solving some of the problems that we see arising in communities around
the Nation. Whether those communities are in Ferguson or Baltimore,
Ohio or Oklahoma or in my hometown of North Charleston, SC, finding
solutions is critical.
I believe that a part of the puzzle includes body cameras to be worn
by our officers. Body cameras are simply not a fantasy but a part of a
larger puzzle to provide solutions to communities that are distressed.
I know firsthand that the solutions in my Opportunity Agenda work.
As a kid growing up in a single parent household, I drifted in the
wrong direction. I struggled in school. I had a difficult time. I was a
hopeless kid in a challenging situation. I will state that as I look
around the Nation, many of the challenges we see today are kids just
like me, growing up in places like where I grew up, looking for hope,
looking for leadership.
I believe that embedded in my Opportunity Agenda we have some of the
solutions that can help heal and restore as well as direct and instruct
these communities into places of hope and opportunity. I believe that
too often we see impoverished communities and distressed communities as
high-risk communities. I prefer to see them as high-potential
communities, communities where greatness breeds and lives. We just need
to find an avenue to harness the potential and move forward.
I am hopeful that as we focus on the issues that are embedded in the
Opportunity Agenda--issues such as education, and I mean a quality
education in every ZIP Code in America and that we should have high-
performing schools in those ZIP Codes. That includes school choice,
whether it is charter or virtual or home schools or public schools. We
need to have a serious and robust conversation about school choice.
Work skills are so important. In so many of these communities the
unemployment rate is over 30 percent--a 30-percent unemployment rate.
We can challenge those statistics by looking at the work skills and
also by looking at apprenticeship programs, where you can earn and
learn at the exact same time. We are breathing new hope into these
communities. I also think that when we think about the future, we must
think about the chance to save the future of so many of these young
kids who may be losing hope in our country, who may be losing hope in
their communities, and perhaps losing hope in themselves.
We have a chance to make a difference in this next generation.
I thank Senator Grassley, our chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
along with Senator Graham, our subcommittee chair, for agreeing to hold
a hearing on the use of body cameras in the next few weeks. I believe
the hearing on body cameras will produce important information on how
we can deal with some of the challenges in some of our distressed
communities.
I believe we can find ways to restore hope and create opportunities
for every single child in America.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cassidy). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. 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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