[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 41 (Tuesday, March 15, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1496-S1501]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL SEA GRANT COLLEGE PROGRAM AMENDMENTS ACT OF 2015--Continued
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, on another matter--and I thank the
distinguished Senator from Florida for not seeking recognition
immediately. I ask unanimous consent that as soon as I finish, I can
yield to the Senator from Florida.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Remembering Berta Caceres
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, the woman in the photograph next to me is
Berta Caceres, an indigenous Honduran environmental activist who was
murdered in her home on March 3.
Ms. Caceres was internationally admired, and in the 12 days since her
death and since my remarks on the morning after and on the day of her
funeral on March 5, there has been an outpouring of grief, outrage,
remembrances, denunciations, and declarations from people in Honduras
and around the world.
Among the appalling facts that few people may have been aware of
before this atrocity is that more than 100 environmental activists have
reportedly been killed in Honduras just since 2010. It is an
astonishing number that previously received little attention. One might
ask, therefore, why Ms. Caceres' death has caused such a visceral,
explosive reaction.
Berta Caceres, the founder and general coordinator of the Civic
Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras, COPINH,
was an extraordinary leader whose courage and commitment, in the face
of constant threats against her life, inspired countless people. For
that she was awarded the prestigious 2015 Goldman Environmental Prize.
Her death is a huge loss for her family, her community, and for
environmental justice in Honduras. As her family and organization have
said, it illustrates ``the grave danger that human rights defenders
face, especially those who defend the rights of indigenous people and
the environment against the exploitation of [their] territories.''
This is by no means unique to Honduras. It is a global reality.
Indigenous
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people are the frequent targets of threats, persecution, and
criminalization by state and non-state actors in scores of countries.
Why is this? Why are the world's most vulnerable people who
traditionally live harmoniously with the natural environment so often
the victims of such abuse and violence?
There are multiple reasons, including racism and other forms of
prejudice, but I put greed at the top of the list. It is greed that
drives governments and private companies, as well as criminal
organizations, to recklessly pillage natural resources above and below
the surface of land inhabited by indigenous people, whether it is
timber, oil, coal, gold, diamonds, or other valuable minerals.
Acquiring and exploiting these resources requires either the
acquiescence or the forcible removal of the people who live there.
In Berta Caceres' case, the threats and violence against her and
other members of her organization were well documented and widely
known, but calls by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights for
protective measures were largely ignored.
This was particularly so because the Honduran Government and the
company that was constructing the hydroelectric project that Ms.
Caceres and COPINH had long opposed were complicit in condoning and
encouraging the lawlessness that Ms. Caceres and her community faced
every day.
The perpetrators of this horrific crime have not been identified.
Since March 3, there has been a great deal of legitimate concern
expressed about the treatment of Gustavo Castro, the Mexican citizen
who was wounded and is an eyewitness, and who has ample reason to fear
for his life in a country where witnesses to crime are often stalked
and killed. In the meantime, for reasons as yet unexplained, the
Honduran Government suspended, for 15 days, Castro's lawyer's license
to practice.
That concern extends to the initial actions of the Honduran police
who seemed predisposed to pin the attack on associates of Ms. Caceres.
This surprised no one who is familiar with Honduras's ignominious
police force.
The fact is we do not yet know who is responsible, but a
professional, comprehensive investigation is essential, and the
Honduran Government has neither the competence nor the reputation for
integrity to conduct it themselves.
There have been countless demands for such an investigation. Like her
family, I have urged that the investigation be independent, including
the participation of international experts. With rare exception,
criminal investigations in Honduras are incompetently performed and
incomplete.
They almost never result in anyone being punished for homicide. As
Ms. Caceres's family has requested, the Inter-American Commission is
well suited to provide that independence and expertise, but the
Honduran authorities have not sought that assistance just as they
refused the family's request for an independent expert to observe the
autopsy.
The family has also asked that independent forensic experts be used
to analyze the ballistics and other evidence. The internationally
respected Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation, which has
received funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development for
many years, would be an obvious option, but the Honduran Government has
so far rejected this request, too.
Like Ms. Caceres's family, I have also urged that the concession
granted to the company for the Agua Zarca hydroelectric project be
cancelled. It has caused far too much controversy, divisiveness, and
suffering within the Lenca community and the members of Ms. Caceres's
family and organization. It clearly cannot coexist with the indigenous
people of Rio Blanco who see it as a ``permanent danger'' to their
safety and way of life. It is no wonder that two of the original
funders of the project have abandoned it. The Dutch, Finnish, and
German funders should follow their example.
This whole episode exemplifies the irresponsibility of undertaking
such projects without the free, prior, and informed consent of
indigenous inhabitants who are affected by them. Instead, a common
practice of extractive industries, energy companies, and governments
has been to divide local communities by buying off one faction, calling
it ``consultation,'' and insisting that it justifies ignoring the
opposing views of those who refuse to be bought.
When a majority of local inhabitants continue to protest against the
project as a violation of their longstanding territorial rights, the
company and its government benefactors often respond with threats and
provocations, and community leaders are vilified, arrested, and even
killed. Then representatives of the company and government officials
profess to be shocked and saddened and determined to find the
perpetrators, and years later, the crime remains unsolved and is all
but forgotten.
Last year, President Hernandez, Minister of Security Corrales, and
other top Honduran officials made multiple trips to Washington to lobby
for Honduras' share of a U.S. contribution to the Plan of the Alliance
for Prosperity of the Northern Triangle of Central America. Among other
things, they voiced their commitment to human rights and their respect
for civil society, although not surprisingly they had neglected to
consult with representatives of Honduran civil society about the
contents of the plan.
The fiscal year 2016 Omnibus Appropriations Act includes $750 million
to support the plan, of which a significant portion is slated for
Honduras. I supported those funds. In fact I argued for an amount
exceeding the levels approved by the House and Senate appropriations
committees because I recognize the immense challenges that widespread
poverty, corruption, violence, and impunity pose for those countries.
Some of these deeply rooted problems are the result of centuries of
self-inflicted inequality and brutality perpetrated by an elite class
against masses of impoverished people. But the United States also had a
role in supporting and profiting from that corruption and injustice,
just as today the market for illegal drugs in our country fuels the
social disintegration and violence that is causing the people of
Central America to flee north.
I also had a central role in delineating the conditions attached to
U.S. funding for the Plan of the Alliance for Prosperity, and there is
strong, bipartisan support in Congress for those conditions. They are
fully consistent with what the Northern Triangle leaders pledged to do
and what the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International
Development agree is necessary if the plan is to succeed.
I mention this because the assassination of Berta Caceres brings U.S.
support for the plan sharply into focus. That support is far from a
guarantee.
It is why a credible, thorough investigation is so important.
It is why those responsible for her death and the killers of other
Honduran social activists and journalists must be brought to justice.
It is why Agua Zarca and other such projects that do not have the
support of the local population should be abandoned.
And it is why the Honduran Government must finally take seriously its
responsibility to protect the rights of journalists, human rights
defenders, other social activists, COPINH, and civil society
organizations that peacefully advocate for equitable economic
development and access to justice.
Only then should we have confidence that the Honduran Government is a
partner the United States can work with in addressing the needs and
protecting the rights of all the people of Honduras and particularly
those who have borne the brunt of official neglect and malfeasance for
so many years.
Madam President, I yield the floor to the distinguished Senator from
Florida.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I would just add to Senator Leahy's
comments that a year ago, unfortunately, Honduras was known as the
murder capital of the world, with the highest number of per capita
murders per 100,000 people. That has improved somewhat. But that
little, poor nation, under its new President, is struggling to overcome
the drug lords, the crime bosses who prey on a country that is ravaged
by poverty. It is such a tempting thing when all kinds of dollars are
put in front of their noses in order to tempt them to get involved in
these crime syndicates that have a distribution network of whatever it
is--drugs,
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trafficking, human trafficking, other criminal elements--a distribution
that goes from south to north on up into the United States.
So I join Senator Leahy in his expression of grief and condolences
for the lady who was murdered.
Drilling Off the Atlantic Seaboard
Madam President, this Senator has conferred with the administration
on its proposal for the drilling off the Atlantic seaboard. At least
the administration listened to this Senator and kept the Atlantic area
off of my State of Florida from proposed drilling leases for this next
5-year lease period. They did that last year. We are grateful they did
that for the reasons for which we have fought for years to keep
drilling off of the coast of Florida, not only because of what we
immediately anticipate--tourism, the environment--but also our military
training and testing areas.
So this Senator made the argument to the Obama administration that if
you are coming out there with leases off the Atlantic seaboard, don't
put it off of Florida. We have military and intelligence rockets coming
out of Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. We have the rockets coming out
of the Kennedy Space Center for NASA. Obviously, we can't have oil rigs
out there when we are dropping the first stages of these rockets. And
the administration complied.
But the administration then went on to offer for lease tracks of the
Atlantic Ocean from the Georgia line all the way through the Carolinas,
including up to the northern end of Virginia--very interesting. Just
this morning the administration has walked back the offering of those
leases off the eastern seaboard of the United States.
Now, it is certainly good news not only for the fact that they never
did it in the first place off of Florida, but it is good news for the
Atlantic coast residents who then fought so hard to keep the drilling
off their coast. They first released this draft plan in January of
2015, a year ago, and the Department of the Interior had suggested
opening up these new areas of the Mid-Atlantic. As we would expect,
communities up and down the Atlantic seaboard voiced their objection,
and they did it in a bipartisan way. From Atlantic City to Myrtle
Beach, cities and towns along the coast passed resolutions to make
clear their opposition to the drilling off their shores. Obviously,
they weren't the only ones because--surprise, surprise--just this week
the Pentagon weighed in and voiced its concerns, having been just
corroborated in the Senate Armed Services Committee when I asked the
question of the Secretary of the Navy about the concerns that drilling
in the Mid-Atlantic region would impact the military's ability to
maintain offshore readiness because of the testing and training areas.
The Pentagon had voiced this concern two administrations ago with
regard to drilling in the gulf off of Florida, which is the largest
testing and training area for our U.S. military in the world. So today,
there is the Interior Department's decision to remove the Atlantic from
the 5-year plan. Well, what about the next 5-year plan? And what about
the rigs already operating in other areas off of our coast, such as off
of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas in the gulf.
We have carried on this fight now for four decades, and today we
still have a renewed push to allow drilling off of these sensitive
areas for the reasons I have mentioned. Some of our own colleagues are
offering an amendment to a little energy bill that is about energy
efficiency. It is a nongermane amendment. But what they want to do is
to sweeten the pot with all of the revenues for offshore drilling that
would normally go to the Federal Government instead to go to the
States--another incentive to do that drilling by the oil industry. But
what we saw was that the coastal communities--in this case the Mid-
Atlantic seaboard--rise up and voice objections, regardless of their
partisan affiliation.
We have seen again today that the Pentagon raised its objection, and,
unfortunately, we have found a Federal safety regulator asleep at the
switch. It has been nearly 6 years since we faced one of the greatest
natural disasters that our country has ever seen, and that was the gulf
oilspill. Yet, according to the GAO report released just last week, we
are no better off now than we were before that tragic accident. As a
reaction to that accident, the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion
that, I remind my colleagues, killed 11 men and sent up to almost 5
million barrels--not gallons, barrels--of oil gushing into the gulf,
there were a number of questions that were asked: How could this
happen? Where were the safety inspectors?
Well, it soon became clear that the agency in charge--a subdivision
of the Department of the Interior, the Minerals Management Service--was
so cozy with the oil and gas industry that the Interior Department's
own inspector general considered it a conflict of interest. And in
response to the IG's findings, the Interior Department decided to
reorganize, and it split that agency--the Minerals Management Service--
into two, one in charge of leasing and the other in charge of safety.
Last Friday, the GAO--what is the GAO? It is the General Accounting
Office. It is the independent, nonpartisan research arm of Congress.
The GAO released a report that found that the ongoing restructuring--
that splitting into--actually ``reverses actions taken to address the
post-Deepwater Horizon concerns, weakening its oversight.''
The report goes on to say that the Interior Department's newly
created agency in charge of safety--one of the two that were split--the
Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, suffers--this is the
report's words--``a lack of coherent leadership'' and ``inconsistent
guidance.''
So here we are 6 years after the gulf oilspill, and we are weakening
oversight--the very words of the report--6 years later. Obviously, this
is inexcusable. That is why a number of us have asked the Energy and
Natural Resources Committee to hold a hearing on this troubling report
to get to the bottom of it.
Now, at some point, the objections of the vast majority of people who
live along the coast and the economies that depend on those
environments and those white sandy beaches and crystal blue water and
the military bases that are utilizing the testing and training areas
over those waters have to be heard. Their concerns have to be
addressed. We can't continue to keep having a fight every time this
comes up every 5 years. There is too much at stake. Yet the fight goes
on. Now there is the new evidence mounted just last Friday and--lo and
behold--the results of that new evidence this morning--pulling the plug
on the leasing off the eastern coast of the United States.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
Mr. HOEVEN. Madam President, I come to the floor today in support of
the biotechnology labeling solutions bill.
This legislation will avoid a patchwork of State labeling regulations
and in so doing will save families thousands of dollars a year to
protect American jobs and provide consumers with accurate, transparent
information about their food.
First of all, I wish to thank Chairman Pat Roberts for his leadership
on the issue of bioengineered food and for bringing forward his
chairman's mark. Specifically, the biotechnology labeling solutions
bill does three things. It immediately ends the problem of having a
patchwork of inconsistent State GMO labeling programs. Second, it
creates a voluntary bioengineered labeling program within 1 year. So
USDA would set up a voluntary program within a year, and then within 3
years, it requires the Department of Agriculture to create a mandatory
bioengineering labeling program if there is insufficient information
available on products' bioengineered content.
So it makes sure that we don't have a patchwork of 50 State labeling
laws. It sets up a voluntary program within 1 year. Then, if the
information isn't out there sufficient for consumers, it makes sure
that USDA follows up and ensures that the information is provided and
that it is provided in a variety of ways that work for consumers but
also work for our farmers and ranchers and for the food industry so
that we don't raise costs for our consumers.
This bill will ensure that the Vermont GE labeling law, which goes
into effect on July 1 of this year, does
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not end up costing American families billions of dollars when they fill
up their grocery carts. If we don't act soon, food companies will have
one of three options for complying with the Vermont law. No. 1, they
can order new packaging for products going to each individual State
with a labeling law; No. 2, they could reformulate products so that no
labeling is required; or No. 3, they can stop selling to States with
mandatory labeling laws. Of course, all of these options or any of
these options would not only increase the cost of food to consumers but
could result in job losses in our ag communities.
For millions of Americans, the GMO or bioengineered food labeling
issue will impact the affordability of their food. Testimony provided
by the USDA, FDA, and the EPA to the Senate Agriculture Committee last
fall made clear that foods produced with the benefit of biotechnology
are safe. Nobody is disputing that the food is safe. The real risk is
if we don't address the Vermont GMO law, real families will have a
tougher time making ends meet, they will face higher costs, and they
are going to have more challenges getting the foods they want.
In fact, if food companies have to apply Vermont's standards to all
products nationwide, it will result in an estimated increase of over
$1,050 per year per household. For families having a tough time paying
bills, this is in essence a regressive tax. It will hurt people of low
incomes more than it will hurt people with substantial means.
From a jobs perspective, the story is also concerning. It has been
calculated that if Vermont's law is applied nationwide, it will cost
over $80 billion a year to switch products over to non-GMO supplies.
Those billions of dollars a year in additional costs will hurt our ag
and food industry that creates more than 17 million jobs nationwide. In
my home State of North Dakota alone, 94,000 jobs or 38 percent of our
State's economy rely on the ag and food industry.
This is a bad time to make it more expensive to do business in the ag
sector. Recently, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
City testified that net farm income in 2015 is more than 50 percent
less than it was in 2013, and it is expected to go down again in 2016.
So this is an issue that affects our family farms directly across the
country.
If Vermont's law goes forward, many farmers who rely on biotech crops
to increase productivity will be deprived of that critical tool. This
Senator knows how hard our farmers work and how much they put on the
line every year when they have to take out an operating loan for crops
that may or may not materialize. We shouldn't ask them to feed the
Nation with one hand tied behind their backs by taking away
biotechnology.
More than just overcoming the problems associated with having a
patchwork of State regulations, I think it is important for Americans
to know this legislation ensures that consumers have consistent,
accurate information about the bioengineered content of their food. The
biotechnology labeling solutions bill creates greater transparency for
consumers by putting in place, within 1 year, a new voluntary
bioengineered food labeling program to ensure products labeled as
having been produced with biotechnology meet a uniform national
standard.
As I mentioned, food produced with the aid of bioengineering are,
according to the FDA, EPA, and USDA, safe. However, many consumers want
to know if the food they are buying is produced using biotechnology,
which is why this legislation's national voluntary bioengineering
standard makes so much sense. The voluntary program in this legislation
will ensure that a consumer who buys a food product with a
bioengineering smart label in North Dakota is purchasing a product that
is held at the same disclosure standards as food sold in New York,
California, or North Carolina.
This voluntary program will let the marketplace respond to consumer
demand for information. You can look at the USDA organic food program,
a voluntary label many consumers look for in our grocery stores. Yet
this bill goes further to create a mandatory bioengineered food
disclosure program if the Secretary of Agriculture finds that there is
insufficient consumer access to information about bioengineered foods.
We need a solution, and this bill helps keep our Nation's food
affordable, it supports jobs, and it provides consumers consistent
information about bioengineered foods. I urge my colleagues to work
together to support this bipartisan measure.
National Agriculture Day
Madam President, I would like to take just a minute to acknowledge,
recognize, and thank our Nation's farmers on National Agriculture Day.
Today on National Agriculture Day, I want to celebrate and thank
America's ag producers. That includes those in my home State of North
Dakota who provide us with the lowest cost, highest quality food supply
not just in the world but in the history of the world. America's
grocery stores abound with fresh fruits, vegetables, and meats. Our
dinner tables are able to offer our families a greater variety of
nutritious, flavorful foods than ever before. They are a testament to
the hard work, commitment, and innovation of our Nation's agricultural
producers. Agriculture and ag-related industries is also an important
part of the American economy, contributing $835 billion to our Gross
Domestic Problem in 2014.
Further, our America's food and ag sector provides jobs for 16
million people and contributes billions of dollars to the national
economy. Agriculture also has a positive balance of trade and produces
a financial surplus for our country.
I especially want to thank the men and women of North Dakota who farm
and ranch. They made agriculture North Dakota's largest industry with
nearly $11 billion in sales last year. I am proud to say North Dakota
leads the Nation in the production of 9 important commodities and is
first or second in 15. This includes half of all the duram and spring
wheat, more than 90 percent of the Nation's flax, and more than 85
percent of the Nation's canola.
America's farmers and ranchers work through drought and floods, crop
disease, hail, and other challenges year in and year out. Yet they
still get up every morning, put on their boots, and go out in the field
and pastures for our country. Our farmers and ranchers built America,
and today they sustain it. On National Agriculture Day, we acknowledge
the enormous debt of gratitude we owe them.
Thank you, Madam President, and with that I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina.
Mr. TILLIS. Thank you, Madam President.
I thank the distinguished Senator from North Dakota for his comments,
and I would like to be associated with all of them, in fact,
particularly recognizing our farmers in North Carolina. The Senator
from North Dakota and I have had discussions about the friendly
competition among the agriculture States and the hard work they are
doing to feed America and the world, but today I rise to express my
support for Chairman Roberts' bill for the biotechnology labeling
legislation.
I am supporting Chairman Roberts' effort because it addresses a real
problem. The problem is that a small portion of the food industry is
trying to impose their policy preferences onto the entire food supply
chain in the United States. We are where we are because the Vermont law
is not written in a way that merely impacts the citizens of Vermont. It
is astonishing to hear the misleading claim that the Vermont law is
about the right to know. If the Vermont law is about the right to know,
why is it that the law exempts so many products?
Here are some examples of the absurdity of the Vermont law. Vegetable
cheese lasagna would be labeled, but meat lasagna wouldn't. Soy milk
would need to be labeled, but cow's milk would not. Frozen pizza would
need to be labeled, but delivered pizza would not. Chocolate syrup
would need to be labeled, but maple syrup would not. Vegetable soup
would need to be labeled, but vegetable beef soup would not. Food at a
restaurant would be totally exempt, but not food at a grocery store.
Vegetarian chili would need to be labeled, but meat chili would not.
Veggie burgers made with soy would need to be labeled, but
cheeseburgers would not.
By my way of thinking, it is a patchwork that doesn't make sense if
you are trying to come up with a consistent way to communicate to
consumers what is in the food they are eating. The
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Vermont law is a classic case of the government picking winners and
losers and putting the burden of those decisions on the backs of hard-
working Americans.
I had this slide up to begin with, but this is something we have to
continue to be focused on. If you were to take the Vermont law and have
a couple dozen States create their own variance and have all the
complexity added, it is estimated the added cost of compliance would
result in a cost of some 1,000 additional dollars per household. In
this economy, how many families can afford another $1,000 a year for
food?
I am surprised that number is not higher. It most likely will be and
here is why: Manufacturers are subject to a $1,000 fine if one of their
products is mistakenly or inadvertently found for sale in Vermont on a
store shelf. The food industry will have over 100,000 items in the
State of Vermont--a State that has roughly 625,000 residents. If only 5
percent to 10 percent of those products are even unintentionally
mislabeled, that means fines of as much as $10 million per day, in
addition to the millions per year companies will have to pay to
actually change their supply chains to comply with the law to serve a
population of 625,000.
We are often told in this Chamber we need to be more cognizant of the
science. Those who are irresponsibly scaring the American people to
defend the Vermont mandatory labeling law need to understand the
science is against them. Late last year, the FDA rejected a petition
calling for mandatory labeling of foods from genetically engineered
products stating that ``the simple fact that a plant is produced by one
method over another does not necessarily mean that there will be a
difference in the safety or other characteristics of the resulting
foods. . . . To date, we have completed over 155 consultations for GE
plant varieties. The numbers of consultations completed, coupled with
the rigor of the evaluations, demonstrate that foods from GE plants can
be as safe as comparable foods produced using conventional plant
breeding.''
During a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing last week, USDA
Secretary Vilsack responded to questions regarding GMOs by emphasizing
that the mandatory labeling efforts are not about food safety,
nutritional benefits, or sound science. Two weeks ago, the Secretary
was quoted at a conference referring to genetically modified products
saying, ``I am here to unequivocally say they are safe to consumers.''
Chairman Roberts' language does exactly what Congress should be doing
with regard to marketing standards; that is, setting rules of
engagement that are consistent, balanced, and fair for all players in
the industry by providing consistent information to consumers about the
content of their food. With the chairman's bill, the marketplace has an
opportunity to find the best approaches to getting consumers the
information they want without imposing new regulations that add costs
to our food supply, complexity, and no more real information or
clarity.
If we as a nation are going to have a discussion on the necessity of
labeling biotechnology products, fine, but the Vermont law is not the
catalyst for that debate, and that conversation should be with the
American people, not one State with roughly 625,000 people dictating to
the market of more than 317 million people.
I encourage my colleagues to recognize that we should do everything
we can to inform consumers about the content of their food. There is a
right way to do it and there is a wrong way to do it. There is a more
costly way to do it as proposed by the Vermont law or there is a more
straightforward, effective, and consistent way, and that is what
Chairman Roberts is trying to accomplish with this bill. I encourage
everyone to support it.
Thank you, Madam President.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Gardner). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Filling the Supreme Court Vacancy
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss Presidential
nominations. I think most people in this body know I am probably one of
the least partisan people--looking at the issues, working across the
aisle, always reaching out to my friends and colleagues on the other
side of the aisle. I don't look at the barrier a lot of people look at
here.
I know we are able to debate and we are able to advise and consent on
nominations because we just did it. I have a tremendous problem in my
State, and I think in all of our States--Colorado and all across the
country--with opioid addiction and drug abuse. With that being said, I
truly believe that for us to fight this war, we have to have a cultural
change within the FDA. The President of the United States nominated Dr.
Robert Califf, a very good man, but a person who came from within the
industry and who I did not think would bring a cultural change. Still,
he was the recommendation of the President.
The majority leader from Kentucky basically brought that to the floor
for a vote. I thought it was the wrong person, even though this was a
nomination from a President of my party, and me being a Democrat. So I
think it is a misnomer for us to believe we are going to hold hard to
party lines.
I have said that I didn't think Dr. Califf would bring the cultural
change. I hope he proves me wrong. I am willing to work with him on
that, and I will fight to make sure we rid this country of the scourge
of legal prescription drug abuse that is ruining families and
destroying lives. I think we have proved the President can bring people
up, which is his responsibility, and we can look at that person and
agree. In this case, I had only four votes on my side. The majority of
all the Republicans but one--yes, all the Republicans but one--voted
for him. I still think it was wrong, but we are going to make the best
of it that we can.
The bottom line is we did our job. We truly did our job, and I can
live with that decision. I look at the Constitution, and it is very
clear. It says the President ``shall.'' It doesn't say ``may.'' Being
in the legislature--and the Presiding Officer has been in the
legislature as well--the words ``shall'' and ``may'' are worlds apart.
It says ``shall,'' and we know he will nominate.
Why are we not willing to go through this process? I am as likely to
find someone he might recommend who I will not vote for as maybe the
Chair and maybe our other colleagues. I saw what happened when I first
got here. We got condemned for not voting at all. We weren't getting
any votes because there was protection going on. Basically, for whoever
is up in the cycle, tough votes make it very difficult for people to
get reelected. We proved that to be wrong because basically we saw a
big switch in the Senate from the majority to the minority and the
minority to the majority.
I have said very strongly that no vote is worse than a tough vote. A
no vote in this body is worse than a tough vote. If you are saying that
you would rather not vote at all because it might cause a problem back
home, I think we have more problems if we don't do our job. That is why
I can't figure this out.
If the President brings a person up, there is going to be 2 or 3
months, and if we can't find someone we can agree on--60 of us--that
means it will take at least 14 Republicans to find someone they can
agree on and they think is good for the country and move forward. If
not, then it will run right into the next administration, whoever that
may be. But basically we would be doing our job.
I just have a hard time on this one. I am going to evaluate that
nominee based on their legal qualifications and judicial philosophy. I
am going to look and basically see what type of jurist they have been,
what types of decisions they have made, what types of social media they
have been on, and what they have talked about. I will look at all of
that, which is what we should be doing, to find out as much about that
person as I can and to see how they will govern and rule in the future.
Hopefully we will find someone who will look at the issues, look at the
rule of law, and look at who we are as a country. I think we all can do
that. I know very well the Chair can. I know very well every one of our
colleagues
[[Page S1501]]
on both sides of the aisle is able to do that.
I don't believe the President can count on all Democrats, just
because he is a Democrat, falling in line. If that were the case, we
wouldn't have had Senator Markey of Massachusetts, Dick Blumenthal, and
I voting against Robert Califf, who was the President's nominee.
So we are going to have to find that right person. But if we never
get the chance to evaluate the person, I don't know how we can do that.
Again, it truly gets down to the fact that this is the job we are
supposed to do. We talk about orderly business. We are getting things
done. I have heard people say: Oh, yes, we are getting things done now
that the Republicans are in the majority. The Chair has been here long
enough to understand that the majority might set the agenda, but it is
the minority that drives the train as to whether we get on something or
not. So we have to work together.
We have proved the old game plan didn't work. The new game plan is
fine. Let's have an open amendment process, let's go through it and
debate it, and then let it go up or down on its merits. That is what we
are asking for on this. Let it go to committee. When the nomination
comes, let it go to the committee and look at the nomination. I mean
dissect it in every way, shape, or form, whoever that person may be--he
or she. I am willing to live with whatever the committee comes out
with, and I am going to do my own research. When it comes to the floor,
there is no guarantee that I am going to vote for that person--
absolutely not. And I have already proved that. All of us have proved
that we haven't just blindly followed party lines, nor should we. We
aren't expected to. Our constituents don't expect us to do that. They
do not want us to do it, that is for sure.
Again, the Constitution states that the President ``shall nominate,
and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint. .
. . '' He can appoint only if we have the advice and consent of the
Senate. There is no other way this President or any other President can
make that decision. We make the final decision.
Again, we are to the point now where the rhetoric is back and forth
and it gets a little harsher and everybody gets ingrained, entrenched:
By golly, we are not going to take anybody up; we don't care who that
person will be. And I just hate to see that. We are all friends. We all
know each other, and we all truly, I believe, are here for the right
reasons and want to do the best job we can. But we are still expected
to do our job.
At the end of the day, did you do your job? Yes, we looked; the
President gave us somebody; we didn't think that person was qualified;
we didn't think they were centrist enough; they didn't have the
background or a record that we could extract what we felt their
performance would be in the future; and for those reasons, we voted
against that person. Or the President gave us somebody who basically we
found did not have political ties to either side, who basically ruled
on the law--the best interpretation of the law--and with the
Constitution always at the forefront. That is the person he gave us,
and that is the person we would support. But if we never get a chance
to look at whoever is given to us, there is no way we can move forward.
When I was Governor of my great State of West Virginia, I had to do
the job 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, every minute of every day, every
day of every week, every week of every month, every month of every
year. It was expected. That was my job, and I tried to do the best I
could. There were some times when I had to make some tough decisions.
There were times I drew people together and times when there was so
much division that we had to basically let it cool off and then move
forward. But we always kept trying to do a better job for the people of
West Virginia.
I think the American people expect us to do a better job. I really
do. I don't care who gets credit for it--Republicans, Democrats.
Basically, it should be all of us because the way this body works, it
takes 60 votes to get on something, if we want to make that the
criteria.
With that being said, I can assure you there will not be a person the
President of the United States gives us--whether it is this President
or the next administration and the next President--who will be the
perfect jurist. We are not going to find that perfect jurist. We are
not going to find someone slanted too far to the left or too far to the
right so that we can't get 60 votes. We are going to have to find
somebody who has shown some common sense and has some civility about
them, basically using the Constitution as the basis and framework for
the decisions they made as a jurist, and show that is how they are
going to govern in the highest Court in the land and be a model for the
rest of the world, reflecting that we are still a government of rules.
We are a body where the rule of law means everything. It is hard for us
to do that if we can't find someone who we feel is qualified to do the
job.
So, Mr. President, I urge all my colleagues--all of my colleagues in
this great body and all of my dear Republican friends--to look and
think about this. If the right person is not there, don't vote for
them. As a matter of fact, I would probably vote against them too. I
have before. I think I am the most centrist Member of this body, and I
am going to vote for what I think is good for my country and for the
State of West Virginia. I think the people of West Virginia expect me
to do that, and they expect me to do my job too.
With that, I hope we have another opportunity to think this over. The
President probably will be giving us somebody in very short order. I
would hope we are able to move to where the Judiciary Committee is able
to look at that person, give us their findings on that person, and
either tell us why we should not advise the President we are going to
consent or find a person we can all agree upon and move forward.
With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. DAINES. 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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