[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 176 (Wednesday, December 7, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H7277-H7278]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MY TENURE AS RESIDENT COMMISSIONER
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
[[Page H7278]]
Puerto Rico (Mr. Pierluisi) for 5 minutes.
Mr. PIERLUISI. Mr. Speaker, after 8 years, this will be my last floor
speech as the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico in Congress. I want
to thank my constituents for giving me the opportunity to serve as
their voice in Washington. They are enduring difficult times, but they
never lose their hope, dignity, or appreciation for life's blessings.
I also want to thank my colleagues in the House and the Senate. I
respect your dedication to public service, energy, and commitment to
the causes you champion. In addition, I want to thank my staff, which
has served me and the people of Puerto Rico with skill, passion, and
loyalty.
Most importantly, I want to thank my wife, Maria-Elena; my four
children; and the rest of my family. They have walked alongside me on
this journey through the peaks and valleys, and my love for them cannot
be captured with words.
It is impossible to condense 8 action-packed years into 5 minutes.
However, if there is a central theme to my tenure as Resident
Commissioner, it has been ``fighting the good fight'' on behalf of the
3.4 million American citizens in Puerto Rico, who have been treated
unfairly for too long.
In an example of baptism by fire, the battle began almost as soon as
I assumed office in 2009, when Congress was debating the stimulus bill
known as ARRA. Even as I was still learning to navigate my way through
the Capitol, we managed to secure virtually State-like treatment for
Puerto Rico, injecting almost $7 billion into the island's economy when
we needed it most.
The fight continued the following year with the Affordable Care Act,
which resulted in the largest funding increase in history for Puerto
Rico's Medicaid program. Separately, we secured legislative and
administrative action that eliminated many of the disparities that
Puerto Rico faced under the Medicare program.
I am also proud of our work to combat drug-related violence in Puerto
Rico, requiring the Federal Government to prepare the Caribbean Border
Counternarcotics Strategy and persuading Federal lawsuit agencies to
increase their resources in Puerto Rico. The number of homicides on the
island was cut in half between 2011 and 2015. But this is not about
statistics. It is about preserving human life.
Moreover, I have tried my best to serve those who have served us.
Residents of Puerto Rico have a rich military tradition, and no unit
exemplifies their courage and character better than the 65th Infantry
Regiment, which fought the enemy on the battlefield and discrimination
in the barracks. After we enacted legislation to award them the
Congressional Gold Medal, these warriors--now in the twilight of their
lives--stood beside President Obama as he signed the bill into law and
were honored at a ceremony in the Capitol, one that I will never
forget.
The toughest fight of my tenure came earlier this year when Congress
and the White House worked together to enact legislation, called
PROMESA, to prevent the Government of Puerto Rico from collapsing.
Nobody was pleased that such legislation was necessary, and nobody
liked every provision in the bill, but I firmly believe that PROMESA,
if properly implemented, provides a path to a better future for Puerto
Rico.
I close with this thought: Puerto Rico's current territory status,
which gives Congress license to treat my constituents like second class
citizens, is undignified and unsustainable.
Following a 2012 local referendum in which island residents expressed
their opposition to the current status and their support for statehood,
Congress enacted legislation that provided funding for the first
federally sponsored referendum in Puerto Rico's history. The
significance of this achievement has yet to be sufficiently
appreciated. Puerto Rico should use this authority to conduct a vote on
whether the territories should become a State. If the people of Puerto
Rico ratify their support for statehood, as I expect they will, it will
be incumbent upon Congress to implement that result. This country,
which was founded on the principles of equality and justice, must live
up to its creed.
May God bless Puerto Rico and the United States of America.
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