[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 67 (Friday, April 29, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H2132-H2136]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICA'S TO-DO LIST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Woodall) is recognized
for the remainder of the hour as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, we all got elected. I have been here 5
years now. You are fairly new to this institution. Everybody comes with
a dream. You don't come because you are looking for new business cards.
You come because you want to make a difference for folks back home. We
all have about 700,000 bosses back home, and they want us to make a
difference. Mr. Speaker, I want to talk about some of those differences
today.
You can't see it from where you are sitting, but I have got a little
America's to-do list down here. I didn't have enough paper back in the
office to do the entire to-do list. There is a lot out there, as I know
you hear every weekend when you go home as well, but I put a couple of
the top things out there.
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I have ``fix our roads and bridges'' out there--just a terrible
infrastructure issue. What separates America in terms of getting our
goods to market around the globe is a world-class infrastructure.
Investment in that infrastructure has waned in recent years as we have
dangerous bridges and we have roads that are in desperate need of
repair. That is one of those things--to maintain the postal roads--that
the Constitution uniquely assigns to the United States Congress. That
is on the to-do list.
Update our national WRRDA policy, Mr. Speaker. We are going to have
wars on this planet--mark my words--not over oil, but over fresh water.
Having a freshwater infrastructure, maintaining our natural resources,
taking care of and being good stewards of those resources that we have
been entrusted with are critically important. It is one of those things
that the Federal Government has a dominant role in doing. We have to
get on that.
Tax relief, Mr. Speaker. Where is that family back home who isn't
trying to figure out how next month works and the month after that and
the month after that?
I keep hearing about this economic recovery, and yes, the numbers are
getting better slowly, but they are not improving nearly fast enough.
The folks cannot afford to support an inefficient Federal Government.
Tax relief is on that list.
Medicare, Mr. Speaker. There is not a man or a woman in this Nation
who depends on Medicare who does not know it is in fiscal peril. There
is not enough money in the Medicare trust fund to meet the promises
that we have made to America's seniors. There is not enough money in
the Medicare trust fund even though working age men and women begin
paying in on their very first paychecks to meet the promises of this
generation and the next. We owe America better than that. Fixing that
is on the to-do list.
Improving veterans' care, Mr. Speaker. For Pete's sake, talk about
something that is uniquely this government's responsibility. We ask so
much of the young men and women in uniform who serve and protect this
Nation, and they ask nothing of us. We make promises to them, and we
must keep those promises. It is hard to open up the newspaper and not
read a story of America's failing its veterans. We must do better, and
we can do better.
Mr. Speaker, cutting spending. For Pete's sake, when folks back home
do send a dollar's worth of taxes to Washington, D.C., they don't
believe they
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are going to get a dollar's worth of value out of it. They think it is
going to get thrown down some rat hole somewhere, on some pet project
that is not going to benefit anyone. They think it is going to get
wasted on a regulatory infrastructure that isn't modernized for the
21st century. Every family has to do more with less in tough economic
times, and the Federal Government is no different. This is just the
beginning of the to-do list, Mr. Speaker.
It is dreary outside. There is a steady mist coming down. I haven't
seen the Sun out there for days. Sometimes I get back home, and I hear
that same kind of spirit coming from folks who are trying to feed and
provide for their families. There is a dreariness out there, Mr.
Speaker, such that folks feel like self-governance is not serving them
in the way that it should. That is why you and I ran for Congress and
that is why I have come to the House floor today with good news.
It is true that when you open up the newspaper, it is failure after
failure after failure, but that is not telling the story of the work
that the good men and women of this Chamber are doing, that Republicans
and Democrats are coming together to do, that the House and the Senate
are coming together to do, that the Congress and the White House are
coming together to do. In this election season of everybody's talking
about what divides us, of everybody's talking about what the failures
are, I want to talk about those things that unite us and on which we
are succeeding for the American people together.
Mr. Speaker, there have been 36 short-term transportation extensions
since the last time we passed a long-term transportation bill. Thirty
six short-term extensions. If anybody is in the construction business,
Mr. Speaker, they know you can't plan to build a bridge in a matter of
days. This is a multiyear project. You need long-term planning and you
long-term certainty.
Historically, that is what the Congress has provided: Republicans and
Democrats coming together in a bipartisan way and Congress and the
White House coming together to provide for a multiyear transportation
bill. But it has been more than two decades, Mr. Speaker, since this
body has passed a 5-year transportation bill--a multiyear
transportation bill--that provides certainty to folks back home and
that fulfills the commitment that every American citizen expects from
the Federal Government in having collected gas taxes on every gallon of
gas that the American consumer buys.
We all know about the infrastructure needs in this country. For more
than two decades, Congress and the White House had not been successful
in fulfilling that responsibility. When Republicans ran the show, we
failed. When Democrats ran the show, we failed. When Republicans were
in the White House, we failed. When Democrats were in the White House,
we failed. But this Congress--the men and women gathered here with this
President in the White House--came together, and we succeeded with the
first long-term transportation bill in more than 20 years.
Mr. Speaker, 5 years of funding is just the beginning. I won't tell
you this is the end of the show. Our Transportation and Infrastructure
chairman, Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania, wants to do more. This isn't
the end. This is the beginning. It is a fantastic beginning, and it is
one that we ought to celebrate of $305 billion going back to
communities around this Nation to focus on safety and infrastructure.
Mr. Speaker, it streamlines the process--the most dramatic
streamlining of the regulatory process. It often takes longer to get
regulatory approval to build a bridge than it does to build the bridge
itself--years wasted on approval processes that could have been
streamlined while we are still being good stewards of our environmental
resources. This bill does that. It also eliminates the increase in
costs that come with those delays, Mr. Speaker, the increase in costs
that come from that bureaucracy so as to make sure the American
taxpayer is getting more value for his dollar.
Mr. Speaker, it shores up the highway trust fund, and we will talk a
lot about trust funds in this time today. The highway trust fund was
going bankrupt. The highway trust fund didn't have enough money to meet
the needs of the American highways, so $70 billion has been transferred
into that trust fund to make sure that we are keeping the promises that
we have made to America.
Mr. Speaker, it has been two decades since America has had this kind
of transportation success. We did that together. Open up the newspaper
and see the divides and see the failures, but know that this is a
success that we had together.
Mr. Speaker, I had water resources on America's to-do list. It had
been 6 years since we had passed water resources legislation in this
body, not in 2008 when Republicans controlled the White House, not in
2009 when Democrats controlled everything, not in 2010 when Democrats
controlled everything, and not in '11 or '12 or '13, but we have come
together, and we have gotten that done. It is not easy. It is hard. It
doesn't happen quickly. It happens slowly and deliberatively. It has
been 6 years since we have been able to succeed together in passing
what we call the WRRDA bill, Mr. Speaker. Now it is done. Now it is the
law of the land.
I want to make that clear, Mr. Speaker. I am not talking about bills
today that the House has passed and are going nowhere. I am not talking
about bills today that the House has passed and the Senate has passed
but that are going nowhere. I am talking about bills today on which the
House has worked entirely through the process, on which the Senate has
worked entirely through the process, and those which the President of
the United States has signed into law--bills that are laws and are
making differences for America's families.
This WRRDA bill, the Water Resources Reform and Development Act, is
the most comprehensive policy reform bill, again, in two decades, Mr.
Speaker. It accelerates project delivery because, again, there is no
more urgent need--as we see in Flint, Michigan--than having a stable
and safe water infrastructure.
Mr. Speaker, it goes into $18 billion worth of projects--projects
that have been on the books for years but have failed, projects that
folks have not committed the time and resources to complete--and it
pulls those back in. It cancels all of those projects, saves that
money, and rededicates it to projects that the American people can
benefit from; and it strengthens the oversight and accountability
because these are American taxpayer dollars we are talking about here.
When they go out the door to localities back home, folks deserve to
know they are being used responsibly. It is an increase in oversight
and accountability. Again, it has been more than two decades since we
have seen something of this kind. We got it done together--Republicans,
Democrats, House, Senate, and White House.
Mr. Speaker, tax relief is on the list for American families, and tax
relief was delivered by this body--this Congress--and this White House.
Mr. Speaker, what Republicans failed to be able to do--and I am not
knocking them. It was a difficult environment. I am a hardcore
Republican from the great State of Georgia, but when George Bush was in
the White House and when Republicans were running the House and when
Republicans were running the Senate, they provided tax relief, but they
couldn't make it permanent. They didn't have the votes to make it
permanent, so it languished out there--families uncertain about what
the tax future would hold, businesses uncertain about what the tax
future would hold. Together, in this body, with the President's
signature, we provided 99 percent of Americans the certainty that even
George Bush and a Republican House and Senate could not do.
Divided government is hard, Mr. Speaker. Divided government is hard.
The differences that we have on policy are dramatic, but there is still
more that unites us as a Nation than divides us as a Nation. That is
true in this Chamber as well, so we came together on tax policy and did
that. Taxes were going to go up, Mr. Speaker. In this tough economy,
taxes were going to go up on almost every family in the land. We
prevented that income tax increase from hitting 99 percent of all
Americans.
Mr. Speaker, I wanted to prevent the tax increase on 100 percent of
Americans, but I couldn't get the votes to get
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that done, and I know you would have joined me in that. Sometimes you
have a choice between can you get something done or will you get
nothing done. Mr. Speaker, I promise you, if you are working hard in
trying to provide for your family back home, you do not care who is to
blame for a problem; you just want the problem fixed. We could have
stood around this Chamber and we could have argued amongst ourselves
about whether the perfect is the enemy of the good. We did not. We
struggled to find agreement, and we found that agreement, and we made a
difference for 99 percent of Americans in the struggling economy to
date. That counts, Mr. Speaker.
We talk about the to-do list as to the Medicare trust fund. Mr.
Speaker, back in the late 1990s, when Newt Gingrich was the Speaker of
the House and when Bill Clinton was the President, they made an effort
to protect the Medicare trust fund from going bankrupt. This is
something that has been on the minds of Americans all the way back to
1965. The Medicare trust fund has never been properly funded.
Healthcare costs have always had a rate of inflation that has been
higher than that of other services, and we have struggled with how to
make the math work. They came up with a plan back in 1997 to fix it.
The plan didn't work, and it was going to cause a dramatic reduction in
what doctors were reimbursed and a dramatic reduction in the benefits
that were available to senior citizens.
Mr. Speaker, so what happened in 2003, when it came time for those
first painful cuts to go into place, the first effort to protect the
Medicare trust fund?
Congress kicked the can down the road. They delayed those cuts from
going into place for 1 year.
What happened the next year?
They delayed it for a year again. The next year, they delayed it
again. Then the next year, again and again and again and again--17
times, Mr. Speaker. We had come together and passed legislation that
was designed to protect the Medicare trust fund, and when it came time
to actually do the heavy lifting, we kicked that can down the road, all
the while having the trust fund becoming more and more and more
unstable. We all knew there was a problem, but nobody wanted to take
the responsibility of fixing it.
Mr. Speaker, in this divided Congress, in this divided government, in
this Washington that supposedly can't come together to fix American
problems, we passed H.R. 2. It was the first bill out of the gate.
Well, it was the second bill out of the gate, but it came right out in
front. H.R. 2 was the first Medicare reform proposal to be signed into
law in more than 10 years, and it solved a problem that had been
created almost 20 years ago but that no Congress before or no President
before had had the courage to permanently fix.
Mr. Speaker, we talk about Medicare as one of the third rails of
politics--don't touch that rail, or else you will be defeated. This
body is not about who wins and who gets defeated. This body is about
who can make a difference. We needed to make a difference for folks who
were relying on Medicare. There were 392 House Members and 92 Senators
who supported this bill. We hadn't been able to fix it for almost 20
years. We hadn't been able to fix it, so the can had been kicked down
the road 17 times.
We came together, grappled with it, struggled with it, but ultimately
came up with a proposal that almost all of the House and almost all of
the Senate could support. They called it the sustainable growth rate,
the SGR, that eliminated this failing piece of Medicare policy, that
bent the long-term cost curve of Medicare, extending the life of the
trust fund. In fact, it cuts the actuarial deficit in Medicare by
almost 10 percent.
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This is heavy lifting, Mr. Speaker, that Congress has punted on and
punted on and punted on. With the leadership we have here today, with
the collaboration that we have here today, not only did we pass it, not
only did the Senate pass it, but we were able to pass it into law.
There are many parts of Medicare, Mr. Speaker. There is part A, part
B, part C, part D. $2.4 trillion, Mr. Speaker, is the way we bent the
cost curve on those various components of Medicare in order to protect
and ensure Americans for another generation that Medicare would be
there for them.
Veterans: Mr. Speaker, again, you cannot open up the newspaper today
without seeing the way that the system is failing our veterans. There
is nothing that brings us together more in this Chamber, Mr. Speaker,
than standing up for those who have stood up for us.
We did that in the Veteran Access, Choice, and Accountability Act,
Mr. Speaker. It was the largest overhaul of veterans health care,
again, in more than a decade.
When Republicans ran the whole show, we couldn't get it done. When
Democrats ran the whole show, they couldn't get it done. When we are
divided, but focused, on crisis in this country, we have come together
and we have gotten it done for the first time, Mr. Speaker.
For the first time in the history of veterans health care, we have
said: If the veterans healthcare system is failing you, but you, as a
serviceman or -woman, did not fail us, we are going to give you a
process to get outside of that veterans system. We are going to give
you a chance to go see your own doctor. We are going to give you a
chance to go see any specialist you need. We are going to give you a
chance to get the care that we promised you, but that the bureaucratic
healthcare system has failed to deliver.
Mr. Speaker, in all of these many years of budget cutting that we
have talked about--trying to clamp down on spending, trying to make
sure that all taxpayer dollars are being accounted for--so many
accounts are going down, but veterans spending is going up.
Why? Because budgeting is about prioritizing. And when we come
together not as Republicans or Democrats, but as Americans, we
prioritize those who have served us.
It is the biggest change in health care for veterans in over a
decade, Mr. Speaker, and folks are finally able to get the health care
that they need. That is not it. There is more.
There is still a system in place that is failing veterans, Mr.
Speaker. We couldn't come together on reforming the entire Veterans
Administration. But we did come together on saying that: If you work at
the Veterans Administration and you are failing our veterans, there is
no place for you on the Federal payroll.
You know how hard it is to get rid of failing Federal employees, Mr.
Speaker. We came together in a bipartisan way to say: If you are in the
upper echelons of the VA, we are asking more of you. If you are in
charge of serving our veterans, we are asking more of you. If you fail,
we are going to ask you to leave so we can get somebody else in there.
We streamlined the firing process, Mr. Speaker, to get rid of
ineffective employees as we had not done before in Federal employment.
Mr. Speaker, let's talk budgets. You know ending budget deficits is
one of America's priorities. You know getting out of the businesses of
mortgaging our children's future is one of America's priorities.
From 1966 to 2009, Mr. Speaker--and I chose that time because that
was the beginning of Medicare and Medicaid, which are two of the
largest spending programs on the ledger today. They are two that have
ballooned much larger than their authors ever suggested that they
would. This is when we got into some really difficult entitlement
spending decisions.
From 1966 to 2009, that 43-year period, the debt in this country went
up by 55 percent relative to GDP. It is still these mandatory spending
programs that are driving our debt, but over a 43-year period our debt
went up 55 percent.
Mr. Speaker, in the first 3 years of the Obama administration, our
debt went up another 34. For 43 years, it had gone up 55 percent, way
too much, but a gradual increase. In 3 years, it went up 35 percent. We
went from going up about 1 percent a year to going up 10 percent a
year, Mr. Speaker.
Today, with this Congress, this House, this Senate, divided
government, from 2012 to 2015, when we have been grappling with this
issue together, when we have been looking for answers together, when no
side had complete control, but we had to work together to find
solutions, we have collapsed that increase back down to that
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1 percent a year. There is so much more to do, but we just disagree.
The President introduces a budget every year. That budget never
balances, not this year, not next year, not 10 years from now, not 100
years from now. The President has different investment priorities than
I do.
I serve on the Budget Committee. We do a budget every year. It always
balances. So I have budgets that balance and budgets that never come to
balance. Clearly, that is a big gap to bridge.
We have begun to bridge it, Mr. Speaker, collapsing the dramatic
increase in the debt to levels that are still too high, but don't
threaten our security as years past have. But no one ever believed we
would be able to come together to do that. No one ever believed we
could work with the President to get that done, and, yet, we have.
Mr. Speaker, a lot of that comes from the Budget Control Act. One of
the best votes I have taken in this institution was the vote for the
Budget Control Act. It was the largest reduction in Federal spending in
the history of the republic. Hear that, Mr. Speaker.
In divided government--in fact, there was a Republican House,
Democratic Senate, Democratic President, dramatically divided
government. Power of the filibuster in the Senate. Hard to get anything
done. We came together because America needed us to, to reduce spending
in the most dramatic way in the history of the republic. It is not
because somebody had all the votes and they jammed it through, but
because we worked together to find a policy that made sense.
Mr. Speaker, people always think, when you talk about big budget and
deficit reductions, that you are talking about some sort of phony
Washington, D.C., math. You have seen the examples where you raise
spending by $5 instead of $10 and then you call that a cut. We have all
seen that math. Nonsense.
When I talk about budgets, I am talking about real numbers. I am
talking about money going out the door. I am talking, even though we
have 10,000 men and women a day qualifying for Social Security and
Medicare, 10,000 new applicants every day for Social Security and
Medicare, working together, we reduced the total amount of money going
out the door not just for 1 year, but for 2 years. That is not funny
Washington, D.C., math, Mr. Speaker. Those are real numbers, real
dollars, going out the door.
We bent the curve together. Some of my colleagues might say we did
too much. I would say we haven't done nearly enough, but we came
together and we made a difference for deficits.
Mr. Speaker, one of the biggest differences we can make for deficits
is putting folks back to work. It turns out you can't pay taxes if you
don't have a job. You have to have money coming in the door in order to
be part of the system. So we focused together on creating American
jobs. We focused together on putting families back to work. Again, this
is something that unites us. It does not divide us.
We have done it in the spirit of trade, Mr. Speaker. We have done it
in the spirit of manufacturing. We have passed legislation here that
the President signed into law that is working today to make sure, if
you work in a manufacturing industry in America, you are not
disadvantaged relative to foreign competition.
If we are trying to export the best products made in the world today,
those manufactured by American hands, we are tearing down the trade
barriers that are preventing those products from getting into the hands
of customers who want them overseas. We have done that together.
When it comes to tearing down those trade barriers, Mr. Speaker,
America is already virtually a free trade zone. We always say we will
play fair with other nations, but other nations don't always say that
to us.
So this Congress empowered the President to go out and do those
negotiations, to tear down those barriers, to make sure that American
working families always get a fair shake on the global scene. Mr.
Speaker, we haven't seen that happen in a decade.
A Republican Congress came together to work with a Democratic
President to say we are all in this boat together. Putting families
back to work is not a Republican priority alone, though it is a
Republican priority. It is not a Democratic priority alone, though it
is a Democratic priority. It is an American priority. That is why
America's House and America's Congress and America's President work on
it together.
Mr. Speaker, that takes me back to where I started. I will put
America's to-do list up here on the board. I talked about the dreary
weather outside and kind of the dreary spirit that I feel sometimes
when I talk to folks about how Congress is operating and how Congress
and the President are working together and how America, in the spirit
of self-governance, is succeeding or failing at addressing America's
priorities.
Mr. Speaker, we did the first roads and bridges bill, $305 billion,
in more than two decades. It is more long-term certainty than America
had seen in 20 years because it was the right thing to do.
We updated the national water policy, Mr. Speaker. We have done
more--it was the most substantial, positive improvement to delivering
clean water to American citizens than we have seen in more than a
decade. We did that together.
Tax relief: Mr. Speaker, working together, we prevented taxes from
going up on 99 percent of American families. Working together, we did
things that George Bush and a Republican Congress couldn't do because
they didn't have the votes 15 years ago. We did that together because
it was the right thing to do in this tough economy.
Mr. Speaker, we came together on Medicare reform. There were 17
short-term extensions, kicking the can down the road, Congress and the
President afraid to take a stand and solve a problem. We came together
and did that, Republicans and Democrats, House and Senate, President
Obama and America's Congress.
Improving veterans health care: Mr. Speaker, for the first time in
American history, if the veterans healthcare system is failing you, we
give you an exit ramp to go and see your physician, your specialist,
the best that America has to offer, because, as a serviceman or -woman,
we have made promises to you and, in a bipartisan, bicameral way, we
are committed to keeping those promises. It is the biggest reforms in
more than 10 years.
Mr. Speaker, we have cut spending. We have cut spending not with
phony Washington, D.C., math, but with real dollars going out the door.
The biggest deficit-reduction package in American history we did
together, a divided government, divided Congress. But it is the right
thing to do for the American people, and that is what this Congress is
about.
Mr. Speaker, that is just the beginning of the to-do list. I don't
want to feel like I am tooting the horn of bipartisanship in this
institution. I didn't even have education reform on that list. I didn't
have education reform on that list. But we have done it.
We have come together in a bipartisan way, bicameral, with the White
House, signed into law the biggest evolution of education policy that
we have seen in 10 years. Again, it has been more than a decade since
we have come together to make sure that principals, teachers, and
parents have more control over the education of children in our
communities.
We repealed 49 different programs, Mr. Speaker. I am not saying
hardcore conservative Republicans repealed them. I am not saying
liberal Democrats repealed them. I am saying together we scoured the
entire Federal education landscape looking for ways to do better for
our families back home.
When we rolled up our sleeves, when we took off the Republican and
Democratic labels, when we all sat down as parents and grandparents and
community leaders about how to do better for our children, we found 49
programs, all of which had a constituency out there, all of which had
somebody making a buck off of them, but they were programs that were
failing our children and we ended them. We ended them together because
it was the right thing to do. It is the biggest education reforms, Mr.
Speaker, again, in more than a decade.
Mr. Speaker, I don't have the time to go through the difference that
we are making together. From our veterans,
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H.R. 91, H.R. 203, H.R. 313, H.R. 2499, on and on and on, not bills
that we have passed here in the House, though we have, but bills we
have passed in the House, bills that have been passed in the Senate,
bills that the House and Senate have come together on, bills that have
been sent to the President's desk, and bills that the President has
signed into law, making a difference.
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Mr. Speaker, reducing the size and scope of government. H.R. 1626,
H.R. 2029, H.R. 2048, and the list goes on and on and on. Doing things
together for our bosses back home because they are going to make a
difference.
Mr. Speaker, creating jobs and expanding economic opportunity. Again,
H.R. 2029, H.R. 22, H.R. 1000, S. 535. Mr. Speaker, yes, there are even
some bills that originated in the Senate that are delivering for the
American people. I am proud to say most of them start with H.R., but
there are even a few Senate bills in there. Good ideas from the other
body that we took on, that we made better, that we sent to the
President's desk, that he signed.
Defending America's freedom and security, patient-centered healthcare
solutions. Mr. Speaker, everybody talks about the President's
healthcare bill. You are either for it or you are against it. It is a
divisive issue. Nobody talks about the fact that there are parts of the
President's healthcare bill that I believe are broken from the hard
core right and that my friends on the left believe are broken, too. And
so we have come together not once, not twice, not three times, not five
times, but almost a dozen times to repeal parts of the President's
healthcare bill that we all agreed were not serving the American
people.
Mr. Speaker, at the end of the day, it is not about who can be a good
Republican or who can be a good Democrat. It is about who can be a good
public servant, and that is never going to make the front page of the
newspaper. It is never going to be a part of this Presidential election
cycle. It is never going to be in a commercial on TV talking about how
successful we are when the cameras go off, when the labels come off,
and when we are focused on what we all came here to do, and that is to
make a difference.
Mr. Speaker, we are going to keep going on through this election
cycle. There is going to be more division, there is going to be more
strife, and there is going to be more finding out who is to blame and
whose fault it is.
I have gotten to know the men and women in this Chamber, Mr. Speaker.
I confess, there were some of them that I wanted to dislike from the
get-go. Oh, I wanted to dislikes them. I had seen them on TV, and I
knew they didn't have any merit, didn't have any business being here,
didn't have any desire to serve the American people.
Mr. Speaker, my confession here today is I was wrong. I was wrong.
There are colleagues on the other side of the aisle with whom I
disagree with about virtually everything, but for that one small issue
on which we find some common ground, they will roll up their sleeves
and they will bleed with me and sweat with me until we find a way to
make a difference for families back home in their district and mine.
Mr. Speaker, there are folks on the other side who come down here on
this floor and rail and rail and rail, and it is every partisan tagline
that you could imagine, but when the camera goes off, they roll up
their sleeves and they get to work on making a difference for their
district and for mine.
Mr. Speaker, my voice is not loud enough to drown out all the
division that is in a Presidential election campaign. Mr. Speaker, my
voice is not loud enough to drown out all the commercials going on all
over the country and all the headlines all over the country that talk
about how Washington is a big cesspool, and it is broken, and we should
just give up on self-governance altogether, but not me. My voice may
not be loud enough, but it will be tireless.
I believe in self-governance. I believe that my district has
priorities that are going to be different from priorities in another
district, and that is okay. I believe that division sometimes brings
out the best of ideas, and that is okay. I believe that my colleagues
believe that there is no challenge too big for America to confront when
Americans confront it together.
I do not know what November holds, but I know this: We have the best
system of governance on the planet. It is not easy. It is not clean. It
is not simple. But when you put the American people in charge, it is
effective.
Mr. Speaker, you are not going to sell good newspapers talking about
the difference that we make together in self-governance, but we are
going to make that difference together. Folks here didn't come for the
headlines. They came to do the things that mattered, and I am proud to
work with folks on both sides of the aisle to get that done.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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