[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 172 (Thursday, December 1, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6646-S6649]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TSUNAMI WARNING, EDUCATION, AND RESEARCH ACT OF 2015--Continued
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Georgia.
filling the supreme court vacancy
Mr. PERDUE. Mr. President, I rise to discuss the vacancy of the U.S.
Supreme Court.
We have been on this issue and what needs to happen next year when
our next President is sworn in. For months this year, I and other
Members of this body held our ground in saying that the American people
deserve a voice in this process. We talked about how the integrity of
the advice and consent process, clearly outlined in article II, section
2 of the U.S. Constitution, was at stake. We outlined years of
precedent against nominating and confirming a Supreme Court Justice
during a Presidential election cycle.
The last time a vacancy arose and a nominee was confirmed in a
Presidential election year was 1932, and 1888 was the last Presidential
election year in which a Justice was nominated and confirmed by a
divided government. Confirming a nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court
should never be distorted by political theater of a Presidential
election cycle. This is a bipartisan position. Both parties have said
at different times in the past decade or so what I and many colleagues
on this floor have said just this year.
Since day one, I have consistently said that no Supreme Court nominee
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should be considered for the Supreme Court or considered by the Senate
before the next President is sworn in. That also meant no consideration
during the lameduck, either, no matter the outcome of the election. You
can't have it both ways. This was my position before the election. This
is still my position today. It was and is about the principle, not the
individual. As an outsider to the political process, this was a logical
and an easy position to take from the very beginning. The process for
nominating and confirming a Justice to the U.S. Supreme Court is
enshrined in our Constitution.
The hyperpartisanship and politics of a Presidential election cycle
should have absolutely no place in this process. Confirming any
individual to a lifetime appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court must
rise from that kind of political posturing. It must be above any
political theater.
Furthermore, as I said previously, the American people deserved a
voice in this process. Election day was not only about changing the
direction of our country, but it was also a referendum on the ballots
of the Supreme Court for generations to come.
Our decision to withhold consent on any Supreme Court nominee, until
after a new President is sworn in, protected the integrity of the
advice-and-consent process from political games in a heated
Presidential campaign cycle. That decision was entirely within the
rights and responsibilities of the Senate, as outlined in the
Constitution.
We did our job, and next year we are going to continue to do that job
of advice and consent as we consider the next nomination for the
Supreme Court. With a new President sworn in, it will be time for the
Senate to confirm a nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court. The election is
over. The people have spoken. Americans have elected a new President.
They chose a new direction.
I urge Members of this body to listen to them, and I urge this body
to remember the integrity of the process. I also look forward to
learning from whomever President-Elect Trump nominates to serve on the
Supreme Court and having the opportunity to vote on his or her
confirmation.
I yield my time.
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. MORAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, since my arrival in the U.S. Senate a few
years ago, I have been a proponent and advocate and have attempted to
champion an issue many in the Senate care about; that is, the desire to
increase America's investment in medical research, increase the
likelihood of outcomes that are desirable in improving every American's
well-being, and end the pain and heartache that comes with diagnoses
that often end in difficult lives and ultimately death. We have worked
hard as a Senate on this issue.
I serve on the Appropriations Committee with the Presiding Officer. I
serve on the appropriations subcommittee that funds the National
Institutes of Health, and from my vantage point, it is clear to me that
we have made a significant investment in increasing the amount of
dollars that taxpayers pay to try to find those cures for cancer,
eliminate the onset of Alzheimer's, help with diabetes and mental
health issues.
Leadership has been busy for a number of months, and that hard work
will culminate with a vote next week on the 21st Century Cures Act. It
is an important component of this medical innovation I find so
necessary for the benefit of Kansans, Americans, and for people who
live around the globe.
This Cures Act invests in the future of our country by providing a
significant increase in Federal support for lifesaving biomedical
research that will simply impact the life of every American--certainly
every American family. These important investments range from
increasing the funding at the National Institutes of Health, advancing
the precision medicine initiative, funding important cancer research
through the cancer Moonshot, and supporting the BRAIN Initiative to
improve our understanding of diseases like Alzheimer's.
There are also provisions that will accelerate the FDA approval and
drug development process as well as fight opioid abuse and suicides.
The subcommittee the Presiding Officer and I serve on in the
Appropriations Committee, or the subcommittee that deals with
agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration, wants to give the FDA
the tools necessary to accelerate the process by which lifesaving drugs
and devices are available for Americans and citizens around the globe.
Under the 21st Century Cures Act, the National Institutes of Health
will receive a significant dollar investment increase over the next 10
years. We know that will drive research forward to develop a greater
understanding of rare diseases. We often think about NIH as dealing
with those major afflictions--cancer and Alzheimer's and diabetes--but
many Americans unfortunately suffer from rare diseases, and we want to
help find the treatments that are patient-centric that treat rare
diseases as well.
This funding will send a message that we acknowledge the benefits of
NIH research in a strong bipartisan way. This funding will also work in
tandem with those increases that we have provided at NIH through the
normal annual appropriations process.
We have always given NIH the ability to prioritize their research
that could result in the biggest bang for the buck, the most lifesaving
opportunities, but obviously the more resources NIH has, the more
opportunities they have to find those cures and advancements in
treatments.
This effort also supports the best and brightest among us--those
researchers and scientists. I want young Kansans to have a future, if
they are interested in science and mathematics and engineering and
research, and an opportunity to pursue those careers, hopefully in our
State, but certainly in this country. We want the United States to
continue to be at the forefront of medical research and within the
realm of science and engineering as well. This is an economic engine
for our Nation. It can be and is an economic engine for my State. The
Cures Act accelerates those opportunities for young people and others
across the country who want to devote their lives toward a noble cause
of making life longer, greater longevity, but also with fewer
challenges and afflictions that come to many people who encounter
disease.
The burdens of diseases like Alzheimer's, cancer, stroke, and mental
illness can be lessened through research. A long time ago, well before
the Affordable Care Act and ObamaCare, I sat down and put my thoughts
on paper as to what we should do to try to reduce the cost of health
care in this country. What can we do to reduce the price people have to
pay to be insured? That list is long. In my view, the way to do this is
incremental, but one of those increments is to invest in medical
research. The amount of money that we can save if we can find the cure
for cancer, if we can find the delay for the onset of Alzheimer's, is
certainly in the billions of dollars, and the investment in medical
research helps us to save health care dollars, therefore helping us to
make health insurance more affordable for all Americans. It certainly
is an investment in economics, it is an investment in the ability to
save money, as well as what we know about saving lives and making
treatments available to people who otherwise would have less life
enjoyment as a result of disease.
New scientific findings are what yields breakthroughs that enable us
to confront the staggering challenges of disease and illness, and we
can do that through the Cures Act and the efforts we have made over the
last several years to make certain that NIH has additional resources.
When it comes to cancer, half of all men and a third of all women in
the United States will develop cancer in their lifetime. This bill
includes the Cancer Moonshot provision for $1.8 billion of funding. It
seeks to combat those statistics to reduce the chances that somebody
encounters cancer in their lives and to reduce the costs associated
with it. This research will focus on accelerating cancer research and
make more therapies more available to
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more people, to a wider range of patients, and improve our ability to
detect cancers at earlier stages of its development and, hopefully,
prevent that disease altogether.
So cancer is front and center with the Moonshot and the Cures Act.
For the Food and Drug Administration, an agency that I have learned
more about in the last couple of years and have taken a greater
interest in, we need to have reforms that are included in the Cures Act
that target speeding up the FDA's approval of new medicines and medical
equipment.
Pharmaceuticals have become a significant portion of how we treat
disease. It used to be in the early days of my life, and certainly in
my parents' lives, that you went to the doctor and you were examined
and you may be admitted to the hospital. So often today you are
examined, and you are given a prescription. It is a way now that we
treat patients. We have today a wider variety of opportunities that
pharmaceuticals provide, and we need to make certain that the FDA has
the resources, has the right mentality, the mindset--is not a
bureaucratic organization--that can advance the production of new drugs
available to treat Americans with a wide array of options. This
legislation brings a patient-focused view to drug development that will
be so relevant in the process of bringing forward the things we need to
cure and treat Americans.
Opioids have been a topic of conversation of this Senate for a number
of months--for the last several years, in fact--and, unfortunately,
millions across the country struggle with an addiction to opioids. It
is a heartbreaking reality. The Presiding Officer and I come from rural
States. We wish we could say that our States are immune, that it is a
problem for folks in the cities or suburbs or someplace else. But,
unfortunately, opioids and other drug addictions are a significant
component of the challenges we face at home. We include in the Cures
bill additional dollars to address the addiction issue, including
prevention and treatment, prescription drug monitoring programs, and
efforts to reform our current system.
It is important that this legislation pass as a followup to the
Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, which I voted for earlier
this year, to try to stop the spread of opioid abuse in communities
across the country.
I have started paying more attention to mental health issues at home
as well, visiting our community mental health centers, visiting our
State and mental health hospitals. We need to make certain that in our
efforts to focus on health care, we have an appropriate prioritization
of mental health as well. The 21st Century Cures Act takes steps
forward in that regard in providing solutions for more than 11.5
million American adults who live with mental illness that is considered
disabling. Important sections of the Helping Families in Mental Health
Crisis Act, which represents some of the most significant reforms to
the mental health system in more than a decade, are included in the
Cures Act. These efforts are aided by establishing a new Assistant
Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Abuse at the Department of
Health and Human Services, and we are hopeful that this person will
help us coordinate direct funding and remove the regulatory barriers
that hold back our abilities to find treatment and cures and care for
people who suffer from mental illness.
Suicides are a significant problem. The Presiding Officer and I serve
on the Veterans' Committee together, where suicides by veterans are an
ever-present problem. Twenty-two veterans a day commit suicide. Our
efforts at focusing research and treatment in regard to mental health
can help save the lives of those who sacrificed so much for us and
comfort their families and avoid disasters and tragedies that occur way
too often.
There are a couple of provisions that were included in this
legislation as it works its way through the Senate. I am supportive of
many of those related to rural health care. For my time in Congress, I
have been an active member of the rural health care caucus. I represent
a State that has 127 hospitals in communities across our State. Those
hospitals provide health care and jobs for people in rural America.
Rural Kansans have paid into FICA and Social Security taxes and deserve
to have the attention they need for treating individuals who choose to
live in rural America, in keeping those hospital doors open, keeping
physicians in our communities, and keeping the pharmacy open on Main
Street. Those are things that matter greatly to me.
Unfortunately, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, a
component of the Department of Health and Human Services, often creates
rules and regulations that make no sense in the places that the
Presiding Officer and I come from. So I am supporting a couple of
things in particular that are included in this bill. We had a
regulation that came from CMS--the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services--generally called physician supervision. Its enforcement is
delayed 1 year in the Cures Act. I am the sponsor of legislation to rid
us of that regulation permanently, but it is a benefit for us to have
it out of the system for another year as we work to find that permanent
solution. But the idea that there must be a physician present in
certain circumstances--it is difficult for us to have a physician on
site in a room with a patient in every circumstance, and our mid-levels
and others are important to us in rural communities in particular. That
delay is something we have worked hard on, and I am pleased to see that
we were successful in getting it included in this legislation.
Many of those hospitals that I mentioned in Kansas--127 hospitals in
our State, 80-plus--90 or so--are what are called critical access
hospitals, which is a special designation that allows them a so-called
cost-based reimbursement. When I was in the House of Representatives, I
authored legislation that created an opportunity to expand the critical
access hospital designation to hospitals that are slightly larger and
that wouldn't otherwise meet the criteria, which is 25 beds or less.
There is a demonstration project, a pilot program that has been
operating in the country for the last 5 years, trying to determine what
cost-based reimbursement would mean for hospitals that are slightly
larger than 25 beds. That demonstration project is expiring.
Fortunately, language in the Cures Act extends that community health
demonstration project--something, again, we have worked hard to make
certain happens. I am pleased that the lead sponsors of this
legislation were amenable to our request to include these provisions.
I would conclude by saying the United States has a responsibility to
continue our leadership in providing medical breakthroughs that will
help change the world, and certainly change people's lives, to develop
those cures and treat diseases, and we must commit ourselves to
significant support for research that is supported in legislation just
like the 21st Century Cures Act. This legislation has the capacity to
benefit millions of Americans suffering from chronic diseases. It can
help our grandparents, our children, our lifelong best friends, and we
can avoid the tragedy that comes with a diagnosis that often ends in
death. People's lives depend upon the decisions we make, and this is a
decision we can make that will benefit many Americans and their
families.
Our researchers must be able to rely on consistent, sustainable
funding support from Congress; otherwise we will lose the best and
brightest, and we will lose men and women who think maybe they want to
be a researcher and find a cure for a disease, but because of their
uncertainty as to whether or not their research might get funded or
whether the funding is going to be there next year--they get it, but
they are uncertain as to whether it will continue. We don't want to
lose those bright minds and noble colleagues, people across our country
who might enter into the profession of medical research to help find
ways to meet the needs of Americans and their health care.
NIH-supported research has raised life expectancy, improved the
quality of life, and lowered overall health care costs. This
legislation strengthens that circumstance and allows us to better
remain globally competitive in the arena of medical research. The 21st
Century Cures Act is a powerful statement by Congress, but, more
important than being a statement, it is something that will actually
make a difference in the future of the people that we care about.
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I commend the efforts by many Senators and Members of the House to
make certain that this legislation arrives here in the Senate before
there is a recess for the holidays. It will be a strong statement, but,
more importantly, we expect significant results and the improvement of
people's lives across the Nation and around the globe.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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. SCOTT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cassidy). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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