[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 169 (Monday, November 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S6511]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GETTING OUR WORK DONE
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, while the President-elect is considering
additional nominees to fill his Cabinet, we in the Senate--working
together with our House colleagues--have our own responsibilities to
fulfill before the end of this year.
Most pressing is legislation to fund the government, something that
unfortunately has been hindered by our Democratic colleagues slow-
walking the appropriations process. Actually, calling it slow-walking
is a little too generous. What they did is block the normal
appropriations process, where the 12 separate appropriations bills
would be voted out of committee--which they were, on a bipartisan
basis--but then they would come across the floor of the Senate where
amendments would be offered, and we would actually vote on them before
sending them to the President to be signed into law.
Instead of this normal process--which is transparent, it is
bipartisan, in the best traditions of the Senate--we were denied the
opportunity to do that, resulting now in our need to pass a year-end
continuing resolution, kicking the funding of the government over to
perhaps sometime in the spring. This was strictly as a result of the
gamesmanship of our colleagues, many of them blocking the same
appropriations bills they voted for, on a bipartisan basis, before the
Appropriations Committee itself.
Despite those obstructions, we have actually tried to do some good
work. We passed our first bicameral budget since 2009. As I said, the
Appropriations Committee voted out all 12 appropriations bills.
Despite the obstructionism we have seen and despite where we find
ourselves, I ask all of us to take stock of where we are, given what we
saw happen in the historic election of November 8. I think the American
people have made very clear they want the government to function and
they don't have a lot of tolerance for gamesmanship or partisanship or
obstruction, but we cannot move forward with other substantial
legislative goals until we address funding for the remainder of this
fiscal year. While I am disappointed we find ourselves where we are
today--having to pass another short-term continuing resolution until
next March or so--this waiting until the last minute is not a good way
to do business. I hope next year, with the new administration and with
the leadership of Senator McConnell, Speaker Ryan in the House, and
with more cooperation from our Democratic colleagues, we can have a
regular and open appropriations process, one that will serve the
American people much better. It will certainly serve the interests of
the Defense Department and other people who need to be able to plan
beyond 2 months or 3 months in terms of what they can do with the money
Congress is going to appropriate.
Until then, I urge my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to set
aside the disputes we have had over the last year and the election
itself----which I know some are finding it easier to see the results of
the election in the rearview mirror than others, as evidenced by the
comments I heard from the Senator from Massachusetts when I came to the
floor--but we need to pass a bill that will fund the government and
allow us to move forward. I hope we can do that. Then, once we have
completed the work for this year, we can come back in the new year with
a new administration, a new Congress, and recommit ourselves to doing
the people's work and doing it in a consensus-building, bipartisan way
that listens to what our constituents are telling us they want, not the
siren call of the people who think they know better than they do what
is good for them but to listen to the American people and then get
about the work of passing legislation which promotes their interests.
This is first to assure for the common defense but, secondly, to make
sure our economy starts to grow again so people who want to find work
or want better paying jobs can find work available so they can provide
for their families and pursue their American dream.
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. 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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