[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H1806]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REINING IN GOVERNMENT: A NEW ATTITUDE AND A NEW DAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Florida (Mr. Yoho) for 5 minutes.
Mr. YOHO. Madam Speaker, it is a great day here in America.
Four years ago I came to Congress with a desire to change the
business-as-usual politics in Washington, D.C. That road has been
tough, but change has been achieved. My efforts, along with the efforts
of like-minded colleagues, changed the leadership of this House for the
better. There has been a renewed work ethic and excitement to set forth
an agenda for the American people that puts them first, not Big
Government, not Big Business. There is truth in the saying: Do not grow
weary in well doing.
Madam Speaker, with positive incremental changes taking hold, the
keystone to our success will be a change in leadership at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue. Our current administration has done everything it
can to avoid working with Congress. Time and again, Republicans have
sent legislation to the President's desk on behalf of the American
people, only to have each one of them vetoed. With every veto, the
President casts aside the will of the very people who elected us to
serve, telling them, essentially: I know what is best for you. Or he
rules with a pen and a phone.
Every Member of Congress takes their work and the work of the
American people seriously as Representatives and as a legislative body.
If this administration, in their remaining time in office, doesn't want
to work with Congress on anything, then the Republicans in the House
and the Senate must take action to address the issues facing the
American people.
Due to the President's policy of stonewalling Congress, the
legislation that we have passed has no chance of gaining his signature.
Compromise, once accepted as a means to accomplish the greater good,
now seems to be a thing of the past. The executive branch, whether held
by Democrats or Republicans, has grown accustomed to exercising
unilateral power to reinterpret existing law and twist it to fit its
own ideology.
Again, I want to repeat. The executive branch, whether held by
Republicans or Democrats, has used that power and twisted it to fit its
own ideology.
Congress has no answer to the authoritative rulemaking process used
by government agencies today. Madam Speaker, we need to reestablish a
check on those agencies that are willingly disrupting business across
America.
I am not talking about rules that were crafted with an understanding
of the industry and a truly thoughtful process which included all
stakeholders. I am talking about the rules, like the Clean Power Plan,
endorsed by radical environmental groups with no reasonable knowledge
of what affordable energy means to people who live paycheck to paycheck
and follow an ideology of their own.
To blunt these rules, Congress must have a tool that truly is a check
on the executive, one that forces the executive and legislative branch
to work things out together.
One tool that scholars repeatedly pay lip service to is the power of
the purse. We talk about it all the time, but we don't see it in
action. While historically being an important tool to enforce the will
of Congress, nowadays, a fight over spending devolves into a blame game
over shutting down the government. It is a black eye to our system of
government; it is a black eye to the notion of stability; and it is an
insult to the American people and furthers the dysfunction of this
great institution.
The balance of power in our government is out of alignment, and it is
up to us in Congress to reclaim what used to be ours--the legislative
veto. The legislative veto used to be a potent check on the executive
branch for the better part of the 20th century. However, a broad ruling
by the United States Supreme Court in 1983, INS v. Chadha, nullified
the legislative veto in over 280 statutes. This was a sweeping
decision, one that both handed more authority to the executive branch
while limiting Congress' ability to stand up to Federal bureaucracies.
In his dissent, Justice Byron White, who was nominated to the Court
by President Kennedy, correctly identified the fallout from the
decision, and I quote: ``Without the legislative veto, Congress is
faced with a Hobson's choice: either to refrain from delegating the
necessary authority, leaving itself with a hopeless task of writing
laws with the requisite specificity to cover endless special
circumstances across the entire policy landscape or, in the
alternative, to abdicate its lawmaking function to the executive branch
and independent agencies. To choose the former leaves major national
problems unresolved; to opt for the latter risks unaccountable
policymaking by those not elected to fill that role.''
As members of the legislative branch, we all must take this
seriously. We may be in the middle an election year, but if we play
party politics when it comes to the struggle between the executive and
the legislative power, neither party wins, and the American people
lose. What is at stake, and more important than party politics, is the
survival of our very form of government, a constitutional Republic.
This is the time to come together, not as Republicans or Democrats,
but as Americans, to bring this power back.
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