[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 79 (Thursday, May 21, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S3232]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEGISLATION PROTECTING VICTIMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. Presudent, on the floor yesterday, the majority leader
claimed that last Congress, Senate Democrats ``failed to bring any
trafficking legislation to the floor.''
I do not normally do this, but I must correct the record. The facts
are exactly the opposite, and the Senate's history must be clear on
this.
Last Congress, despite the opposition of the majority of Senate
Republicans, including Senators McConnell and Cornyn, Senate Democrats
reauthorized our Nation's two cornerstone pieces of legislation that
protect victims of sexual violence and human trafficking--the Violence
Against Women Act, VAWA, and the Trafficking Victims Protection Act,
TVPA. Combined, these two bills reauthorized nearly $1 billion a year
in funding for survivors of these horrible crimes. As we updated and
modernized these landmark laws, we listened to the survivors and the
advocates who work with them every day to make sure that our
legislation responded to the real needs of real people. We were not
looking for gimmicks or shortcuts. Instead, we dedicated hours of time
learning about what was working and what needed to be improved in order
to best meet the needs of survivors.
The end result was two bills that did more to prevent sexual assault
and human trafficking and to reach more victims than ever before.
Because of our comprehensive and inclusive approach, these bills had
the strong and vocal support of more than 1,400 local, State and
national organizations.
In addition to the successful reauthorization of the Violence Against
Women Act and the Trafficking Victims Protection Act last Congress, I
later moved a comprehensive package of legislation to address the issue
of human trafficking here in the United States, which included critical
support programs directed at runaway and homeless youth to prevent
trafficking in the first place. Last year that package, which included
the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act, as well as the Runaway and
Homeless Youth and Trafficking Prevention Act, the Bringing Missing
Children Home Act, and the Combat Human Trafficking Act, was reported
out of the Judiciary Committee, which I chaired. I then sought the
unanimous consent of the Senate to pass that bipartisan package, and
every single Democratic Senator agreed. But Republicans blocked it.
They objected to it. Senator McConnell failed to mention any of this
yesterday.
So if such assertions are going to be loosely made on this floor, let
the record be clear about who, in fact, stood in the way of protections
for trafficking victims last year. Look to see which Members voted
against the reauthorizations of the Violence Against Women Act and the
Trafficking Victims Protection Act. Those two laws were passed with the
votes of every Senate Democrat. And last year, it was Republicans who
obstructed passage of the subsequent comprehensive domestic
antitrafficking package, supported by every Democrat, that included
critical trafficking prevention legislation. On top of all that, under
Democratic leadership of the Senate Appropriations Committee, total
appropriations for trafficking victims' services more than doubled in
fiscal year 2015, rising from $28.1 million to $58 million.
When we look at the facts, it is simply outrageous and laughable to
suggest Senate Democrats did not support antitrafficking efforts last
Congress. These facts matter and I cannot allow revisionist history to
muddy the accomplishments we and so many advocates fought for in the
last Congress.
Regrettably, the newly empowered Senate Republicans have not
continued the same survivor-led approach we took in the last Congress
to pass VAWA and the TVPA. Instead they sought to use a new
antitrafficking bill, the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act, JVTA,
to expand the reach of the Hyde amendment and its restrictions on
health care for these women who are survivors of trafficking crimes. In
doing so, the same Senators who voted against VAWA and TVPA in the last
Congress inserted unnecessary and destructive politics into what was
otherwise a bipartisan antitrafficking bill. The result was to
needlessly tie the Senate in knots for weeks over this legislation.
More importantly, Senate Republicans' effort to expand the Hyde
amendment undermined what should be the very goal of antitrafficking
legislation--to help return dignity and self-determination to the lives
of survivors of human trafficking. That was certainly the goal of our
successful effort to expand the scope of VAWA and TVPA to reach all
victims.
It is also the goal behind the Runaway and Homeless Youth and
Trafficking Prevention Act that I reintroduced with Senator Collins
this Congress. This bill, which was a critical part of the debate last
Congress and should remain a critical part of the debate in this
Congress, aims to prevent young people from becoming victims of
trafficking in the first place. We know runaway and homeless children
are exceptionally vulnerable to human traffickers. These children
literally have nowhere to go. And traffickers prey on this
vulnerability. That is why Senator Collins and I fought so hard to add
this legislation to the JVTA. The runaway and homeless youth programs
supported by our bill keep kids safe, save lives, and prevent human
trafficking in the first place.
I was very disappointed when our amendment failed to pass by just
four votes. What was most disheartening was that the principal
objection was the inclusion of an important nondiscrimination provision
to ensure that no child, including those who identify as LGBT, faces
discrimination by service providers. But I am not giving up. I will
keep fighting to see this legislation passed because it is so
important. As the Polaris Project, a leading antitrafficking advocacy
organization, recently told the New York Times:
Successful efforts to combat modern slavery must address
the root causes that make people vulnerable in the first
place . . . Until critical funding is reauthorized through
the Runaway and Homeless Youth [and] Trafficking Prevention
Act to support critical services, such as shelter beds for
homeless kids, this population will face increased risk.
Senator McConnell and I may differ in our opinions, but I think it is
important to get it right when it comes to facts. To say that Senate
Democrats failed to move antitrafficking legislation last Congress
rewrites history and does a tremendous disservice to all of those
victims and advocates who so recently dedicated years of their lives to
the successful reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act and
the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, and to crafting a bipartisan
package of antitrafficking legislation that was ultimately blocked by
Senate Republicans.
____________________