[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 8 (Thursday, January 12, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H460-H465]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
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CONGRESSIONAL PROGRESSIVE CAUCUS: THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION NOMINEES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2017, the gentlewoman from New Jersey (Mrs. Watson Coleman)
is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
General Leave
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all
Members have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks and
include extraneous material on the subject of my Special Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentlewoman from New Jersey?
There was no objection.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Speaker, I am here this evening representing
the Congressional Progressive Caucus in this Special Order hour, and I
will be joined by colleagues as we will examine what our future appears
to look like as we plan for the transition which is taking place. We
are 8 days away from a new President and administration that continues
to refuse to put Americans first and complicit with Republican-
controlled Congress that will help them execute that mission.
At 1 a.m. this morning, 51 Republican Senators voted to repeal the
Affordable Care Act with no replacement. After 6 years of hollow
grandstanding, Republicans now know that their plan to repeal the ACA
would dump massive costs on families, businesses, and the Federal
budget. The facts are clear, Mr. Speaker.
Republicans' repeal of the ACA would result in the loss of 2.6
million jobs and more than 250 billion--that is billion, B--of gross
State products in 2019 alone. Family budgets and State budgets alike
would be rocked by the reverberations of the repeal. And we cannot
forget about our healthcare providers.
The repeal of the ACA will crumble our critical healthcare
infrastructure, decimating hospitals' and healthcare systems' ability
to provide services, weaken local economies that hospitals help sustain
and grow, and result in massive job losses of healthcare professionals.
While Republicans claim to champion reducing the deficit, OMB
calculates that the Republican budget
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resolution and repealing of ACA would lead to significantly larger
deficits in each year and add more than $2 trillion in debt over the
next decade.
Taking away 30 million Americans' health care, blowing a hole in our
budget, and saddling future generations with debt is the height of
irresponsibility. It is important to note that just 20 percent of
Americans support this repeal and delay plan.
In fact, the American people want Congress to focus on raising wages
and creating good-paying jobs for everyone everywhere in America. The
American people want to be assured that their Federal Government is
working for all of their interests. That is what I want to do as well.
I stand ready to work with anyone who is serious about these
priorities.
Mr. Speaker, the nominees that this President-elect has put forth are
focused on everything but the true interests of the American people.
Maybe they are focused on the personal interests of the President-
elect. Today, the nominee to lead the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Dr. Ben Carson, could not even promise that not one
decision or dollar would go to benefit the President-elect or his
family. This is a problem.
Maybe they are focused on rolling back hard fought freedoms or
protections. Yesterday, New Jersey Senator Cory Booker reminded us that
the nominee for the Attorney General, Senator Jeff Sessions, has not
demonstrated a commitment to the central requirement of the job, that
is to aggressively pursue the congressional mandate of civil rights,
equal rights, and justice for all. This, Mr. Speaker, is a problem.
Perhaps maybe they are not even interested in siphoning money from
children and public schools. Nominee Betsy DeVos, the nominee for the
Secretary of Education, has made a career of advocating for the
shutdown of public schools and supporting legislation that has reduced
oversight and accountability in Michigan charter schools. Her life work
is the very antithesis of everything that the Department of Education
represents.
This is a problem, and to speak to this problem I would like to yield
to the gentleman from California (Mr. Takano), who has experience in
standing up for public education for our children.
Mr. TAKANO. Mr. Speaker, I thank my dear colleague, Bonnie Watson
Coleman, for yielding to me.
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to express my strong opposition to the
nomination of Betsy DeVos for Secretary of Education. To start,
President-elect Trump's nominee to lead our country's education policy
has absolutely no experience in public schools: not as a teacher, not
as a student, and not as a parent. That lack of experience makes her
efforts to privatize public education particularly shameful.
I was a public schoolteacher for more than 24 years--I taught high
school--which means that I have spent at least 24 more years in a
public school classroom than Betsy DeVos. If she actually stepped
inside of a classroom in a public school, here is what she would find:
she would find teachers who are giving everything they can, their
passion, their time, and often their own money to give kids the best
education possible. She would find facilities in need of repair,
classrooms in need of modern equipment, and programs in desperate need
of funding. She would find students who deserve to receive an
exceptional education that will help them reach their potential.
But Ms. DeVos has no interest in supporting America's public
education system. Instead, she will insert a profit motive into our
children's education that will cripple our public schools and punish
the millions of children who attend them every day. The Obama
administration pushed public schools on a race to the top. Betsy DeVos
will create a race to the bottom line.
The result of her work in Michigan serves as a warning to schools
across America. By using her personal fortune to influence policy,
Betsy DeVos engineered a massive influx of for-profit charter schools
into the State of Michigan. Michigan taxpayers now hand for-profit
charter schools $1 billion every year, and, in return, many of those
schools underperform public schools while evading accountability.
The opportunity that comes with a good education is what makes the
American Dream possible for each new generation. If we abandon our
public schools, we abandon the millions of children and parents who
rely on them as a path to a brighter future.
It is very simple. The Senate should not confirm a Secretary of
Education who does not believe in public education. Senate Democrats
and Republicans must send a clear message to parents, teachers, and
students across the country that we stand by our public schools. I hope
they will do so by rejecting this nomination. I thank my dear colleague
from the State of New Jersey. I appreciate this opportunity to let my
views be known and to make a plea with our colleagues in the other
house to do their duty and hold out for a Secretary of Education who
actually believes in public education.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. I want to thank my colleague for coming and
taking the time and speaking on behalf of public education and students
everywhere. We talked about it before, and I am happy to announce that
we will be working as part of the House Public Education Caucus and
looking very closely at those issues that are being brought forth and
those plans that are being offered.
I know if you look at my district in my State of New Jersey, you see
some of the finest public schools in the country. At the same time,
just 12 miles away, you see some of the most challenging. I know in my
district that, if Elizabeth DeVos would take a look at what is
happening in my district, she would see schoolteachers anxious to teach
but have textbooks in what is considered advanced placement classes
that don't even have the cover on the top of the book that those
children are using. I know this because I have seen it for myself.
So higher education is, indeed, that issue, that opportunity, that
difference between living a life of poverty and being able to educate
yourself and prepare yourself for a future that we must stand up for,
and we will. I thank the gentleman for the time that he has given us.
Mr. TAKANO. If I might join in a little more, I became a teacher--
more than, wow, gosh, it must be 30 years ago now--having experienced
the disparity in the public schools in the Boston, Massachusetts, area;
some days being a substitute teacher in Brookline, Massachusetts, and
other days being a substitute teacher in inner city Boston. The
contrast between the wealthy Brookline School District and then the
inner city Boston where you walk through a metal detector woke me up.
And I really believed that if we did not address the achievement gap in
our country, that if the American Dream of social economic mobility was
only available to some and not all of our students, that our very
democracy would be in jeopardy.
It pains me to see from the incoming Trump administration such a
superficial, extreme profit-driven notion of improving our schools. I
wish that both President-elect and Betsy DeVos could see some of the
great work that is being done at my schools in my congressional
district where we have a teacher--I am blanking on his name, but he is
responsible for one-fourth of all the Latinos in the State of
California that score 4s and 5s on the physics AP test. Remarkable work
being done in a regular school that does not cherry-pick its students.
It is a public school in the Val Verde Unified School District that is
making remarkable strides. This work is not being looked at carefully,
is being overlooked, and it is a shame that we have a nominee for
Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, who has such a terrible history,
who is committed to actually tearing down our public school system.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. By nominating Tom Price as the Secretary of
Health and Human Services, President-elect Trump will continue his
assault on the health of Americans. The HHS nominee has made a career
on lining the pockets of insurance companies at the expense of the
sick, on behalf of the rich, and his unwavering support of cuts to
Medicaid and Medicare are forever known.
This signals yet another broken promise by the incoming President to
pledge to leave the essential Federal programs alone, and he is doing
the opposite. This is, indeed, a problem.
Defending the sanctity of American democracy is more important than
any
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partisan consideration. Yet, after reports of Russia's attack on our
democracy were confirmed, Rex Tillerson, nominee for Secretary of
State, wouldn't say if he would support sanctions against the country.
In fact, Mr. Tillerson admitted that he had not yet spoken with the
President-elect about the conflict. This is a huge problem, not the
least of which is one whether or not we can believe it.
I now yield to the gentlewoman from California (Ms. Lee), a champion
for all progressive needs and for all families.
Ms. LEE. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the gentlewoman from New Jersey
for yielding, but also for her tremendous leadership on so many issues,
including as a champion for women and women's health and reproductive
health care, and also for this important discussion tonight.
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I just want to mention that I serve on the Budget Committee, and you
mentioned a nominee, Congressman Tom Price of Georgia, for Secretary of
Health and Human Services. Once again, we see President-elect Donald
Trump making recommendations of those individuals who want to dismantle
the safety net and dismantle health care within the agencies that they
are going to run. This is a very, very troubling development in terms
of these cabinet appointee nominees.
I note that--and many know--President-elect Trump ran one of the most
divisive and prejudiced campaigns that we have witnessed in modern
history. Since winning the Presidency, he has nominated billionaires to
serve in his cabinet, proving that he will govern just as he
campaigned. Also, he has nominated individuals who want to dismantle,
for the most part, the agencies that they will have jurisdiction over.
Another example is his choice for Secretary of State, which
Congresswoman Watson Coleman mentioned, and that is Rex Tillerson. I
serve on the State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs
Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee and understand the
importance of our diplomatic initiatives, our USAID initiatives, and
our efforts to really bring education and health care to the poorest of
the poor around the world. Our Secretary of State serves as the
Nation's chief diplomat and represents America's interests around the
world. I have the opportunity and the privilege to serve on the
committee that funds the majority of these efforts.
So the nomination of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson really troubles
me. His extensive ties to the Kremlin raises the question: Whose
interest will he represent?
Our country cannot afford a Secretary of State who will place private
corporate interests over the needs of the American people and our
national security interests. His recent confirmation hearing revealed
what we have known all along in Republican-controlled Washington, that
cabinet officials will cater to special interests, not to American
families, based on the nominees that we have seen come forward.
It is not just the Secretary of State we should be concerned about.
Here at home, President-elect Trump has nominated cabinet officials
that would turn back the clock on progress. His nomination for
Secretary of Labor, Andrew Puzder, is another millionaire CEO who
benefits from an economy rigged against families struggling to make
ends meet. He earns more than $1 million a year, but opposes a raise
for low-wage workers earning just $15,000 a year. He says that food
assistance programs keep low-wage workers like those he employs at, I
believe, Carl's Jr. and Hardee's--he says that if low-wage workers
apply for these food assistance programs, then the programs actually
discourage work. There are millions of people who are working two jobs
being paid minimum wage who need food assistance, who need food stamps,
because they can't survive in today's economy.
So the working, poor, low-income individuals, should be very troubled
by this appointment as Secretary of Labor, which is supposed to look
out for the rights of working men and women. We need a Labor Secretary
committed to helping working families and addressing the epidemic of
poverty, not one who caters to the most affluent.
Also, by nominating Senator Sessions to lead the Justice Department,
President-elect Donald Trump is making it clear that he will abandon
our fundamental civil and human rights. Senator Sessions has a long
history of opposing civil rights and equality. I am very proud of
members of the Congressional Black Caucus for really setting forth his
record and his history, such as laying out the fact that he was
rejected from serving as a Federal judge due to his blatantly racist
comment. He forcefully degraded the LGBT community, opposed the
Violence Against Women Act, and violated the Voting Rights Act, calling
it an intrusive piece of legislation.
Clearly, someone who has publicly shown prejudice and intolerance is
not qualified to serve as the chief law enforcement for our civil
rights laws. Once again, you see a nominee who really doesn't believe
in the values of liberty and justice for all, a person to head an
agency that is supposed to be an agency that ensures the civil and
human rights for all. Let me be clear, these nominations are a chilling
indication of how a Trump administration intends to govern.
Our Nation has made tremendous progress in the fight to protect,
preserve, and expand civil rights, civil liberties, and human rights
for all Americans. We will not allow a Trump administration to drag us
back into the past.
Finally, let me just say something that is troubling me tremendously
at this point in our history. Our Nation prides itself on being a
democracy. We actually promote democracy abroad through our democracy
programs, which, of course, I have historically opposed. The point I am
trying to make and want to make clear is that this new administration,
when you look at the majority of cabinet nominees, they are very, very
wealthy and do not fundamentally believe in a strong public sector and
in many ways do not support the mission of the cabinets they are
actually asked to lead.
Privatizing Medicare and other public sector programs that ensure
that the most vulnerable have a safety net and an opportunity to live
the American Dream by privatizing these agencies is dangerous. It will
lead to chaos. Private sector takeover of the government is dangerous
and it erodes our public institutions that are required in a democracy.
So, Congresswoman Watson Coleman, I believe this is the dangerous,
slippery slope that this administration has embarked upon, and we need
to expose every step of the way who these individuals are, their
background, and we have to urge that they comply with the ethics
requirement and submit their financial disclosure statements and all
the required ethics forms so that the public will know who they are. We
must be transparent and, of course, we would like for our President-
elect to release his income taxes also.
Again, we kind of see what is taking place now. We knew this during
the campaign. I thought that we were going to see now more of an effort
to unify the country, but, unfortunately, I think these nominees show
us which direction, unfortunately, this new administration will take.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. I thank the Congresswoman. It is true. As we see
the unfolding of some of the drama that is taking place, including that
which affects us and is associated with Russia, it is even more
important than ever that the President show us that he is not hiding
anything regarding his relationships that potentially present a
contradiction of his first and foremost responsibility to us and show
us his tax returns.
I thank the gentlewoman from California very much for being here.
I yield to the gentleman from New York (Mr. Nadler).
Mr. NADLER. I thank the gentlewoman from New Jersey for yielding, for
hosting this Special Order, and for granting me this opportunity to
speak.
Since the first nomination was announced by President-elect Trump's
transition team, phones in my office have been ringing off the hook;
and not a day goes by when I do not hear from my neighbors, friends,
and constituents of their angst, frustration, and discontent. I share
their anger and dread--that feeling of being punched in the gut--as
name after name has been released. Each nomination from President-elect
Trump has put the fox in charge of the henhouse.
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We are not talking about simple differences in partisan ideology. We
are talking about nominees who have devoted much of their professional
lives to undermining the small-d democratic institutions that are the
foundation of our country. This new administration is so extreme that
we cannot, in any good faith, give this President-elect the traditional
deference to name a cabinet that represents his governing philosophy
because the appointments show it to be a philosophy that seeks to
corrupt, if not fully destroy, our institutions, traditions, and
values.
Senator Jeff Sessions, the nominee for Attorney General, was
considered too racist to serve on the Federal bench by a Republican
Senate, much less to head the Justice Department, and is someone who
has so little respect for women's rights he voted against the Violence
Against Women Act and called Roe v. Wade a colossal mistake.
Ben Carson, the nominee for HUD Secretary, said today in his
confirmation hearing that he was against protecting LGBT Americans from
housing discrimination because protecting them from housing
discrimination would be granting them extra rights, refusing to
recognize that LGBT Americans deserve equal rights.
Tom Price, the nominee for HHS Secretary, wants to eliminate Medicare
and Medicaid as we know them, repeal the Affordable Care Act without a
second thought for the millions of Americans who would lose coverage or
would be subject to limits on preexisting conditions and would be
subject to lifetime and annual limits, and has so little understanding
of women's health that he insisted that not a single woman would lose
access to contraception if contraception coverage were eliminated.
Betsy DeVos, the nominee for Education Secretary, advocated for years
to move taxpayer dollars away from public schools and towards for-
profit, private schools that would leave behind low-income students,
minority students, and children with disabilities.
Scott Pruitt, the nominee for EPA administrator, does not believe in
climate change and is so linked to the fossil fuel industry that he has
sued the EPA a dozen times to block environmental regulations designed
to protect us from the effects of climate change.
The list goes on and on, each more horrifying than the one before.
These are not the values the majority of Americans voted for in
November, and I don't just mean because Hillary Clinton won the popular
vote by 3 million. I cannot imagine that the voters who wanted to drain
the swamp and voted for Mr. Trump for that purpose and have the needs
of working people represented are thrilled to see him name the
wealthiest cabinet--with the greatest collection of Wall Street
insiders--in American history.
The fact is, President-elect Trump and the Republican Party do not
have any mandate from the people to carry out the dystopian horror show
this cabinet presents. Rather than rubber stamping the most extreme
cabinet I have seen in my 25 years in Washington, the Senate should
reject these extreme nominees, and then both Houses should do their
constitutional duty to conduct oversight of the administration.
I am ready to do that work. Over a month ago, along with my
Democratic Judiciary Committee colleagues, I sent a letter to Chairman
Goodlatte asking him to hold hearings on the conflict of interest and
ethics provisions that apply to the President of the United States. I
have not heard a response. Every Democrat in this House signed on to
the Protect Our Democracy Act, legislation to create an independent,
bipartisan-appointed commission to investigate Russian hacking in the
2016 election and to make recommendations to ensure nothing like that
happens again. It is interesting that not a single House Republican has
joined us.
I join my constituents and millions of Americans in wanting to know
why Republicans are working so hard to protect President-elect Trump
from having to answer questions about Russian influence in this
election. Why are Republicans working so hard to support President-
elect Trump's extreme and out-of-touch cabinet? Why aren't Republicans
asking the same questions about how President-elect Trump will avoid
conflicts of interest?
I have served in this body for nearly 25 years. I have seen this body
take on the big questions of our time--the role of government in the
lives of everyday Americans, the threat of terrorism in the city I call
home and around the country, the right of every American to marry
whomever they love, the right of every American to vote free of
intimidation, and the right of every American to make their own
healthcare choices. I have seen us come through those battles bruised
and battered but stronger.
That is why I refuse to despair. I refuse to put my head down and
hide. I refuse to give up on America. I will stand here and fight for
the country we all believe in. I will do everything in my power to
represent the strong progressive values of the men and women who sent
me here.
I will work with my colleagues here in the House and the Senate to
stand united against any effort to undermine the rights we have fought
so hard to achieve, whether it comes from the other end of the world or
the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue.
But if there is to be any check on this administration, congressional
Republicans will need to join in that fight, and it starts with
rejecting the shameful slate of nominees.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. I thank my colleague for sharing his insights
and his experience with us. We have a lot of work to do, and we are
ready to do it.
Mr. Speaker, in addition to those that my colleague has mentioned, I
would like to bring attention to some of the other nominees that we
should be considering here.
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We haven't mentioned the Department of Energy and the nominee,
Governor Rick Perry, who disregarded this agency so much that he
couldn't even remember that he wanted to eliminate it when he was
running for President, or even Linda McMahon, who is the wife of a
billionaire. It seems to me that this litany of nominees belongs to the
millionaire-billionaire club. They know each other well, and the one
thing that they are committed to is ensuring that their interests and
the interests of this President-elect, in his private life, are
advanced. I think that the people in this country need to understand
how troublesome this is.
I yield to the gentlewoman from New York (Ms. Clarke), the co-chair
of the Caucus on Black Women and Girls and a fighter for the rights of
all working families and all vulnerable families.
Ms. CLARKE of New York. I thank the gentlewoman from New Jersey (Mrs.
Watson Coleman).
Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to the nomination of Betsy DeVos as
Secretary of Education.
I know that my colleagues have been talking about their concerns with
regard to the troubling nominations of Donald Trump, and I want to add
my voice with respect to the Secretary of Education.
About 90 percent of Americans--Republicans and Democrats alike--send
their children to public schools; and as a proud graduate of the New
York City public school system, I, myself, know firsthand of the
importance of both primary and secondary education as part of early
childhood and young adulthood. Most public schools in the United States
are operated by the city, town, or county for the benefit of the
public, and all of the resources that are allocated to public schools
are used to support the development of students and to prepare them for
success in the 21st century.
Mr. Speaker, I believe Betsy DeVos has a very different approach to
education, and that is extremely clear. She and her family, over the
years, have devoted millions of dollars to replacing public schools in
Michigan with charter schools, most of which have recorded test scores
in reading and math that are well below the State average. Let me
repeat that--most of which have recorded test scores in reading and
math that are well below the State average.
Recently, the Detroit Free Press released an article that explained,
while families in Detroit have the choice of many different charter
schools, few of these choices actually offer a quality education.
Mr. Speaker, I am concerned that Betsy DeVos has used donations to
provide to Republicans in the Michigan
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State Legislature to prevent State agencies from investigating as to
whether charter schools are providing students with a comprehensive
education that will prepare them for the future. I am alarmed that the
system that was developed by Betsy DeVos, which allows for-profit
corporations to operate charter schools, realigns those resources
intended for schoolchildren into the pockets of shareholders--making a
profit off the backs of children.
Since 1959, the DeVos family has operated Amway, which is a business
that has been labeled as a pyramid scheme--paying out millions of
dollars in fines and cheating working families. We cannot allow Betsy
DeVos the chance to extend those same basic principles used during her
time at Amway to affect our education system--enriching wealthy
investors at the expense of our children's education. It is not a
solution. It is a problem.
I thank my colleague for giving me the time. I hope that the American
people are watching very closely as to what is taking place here
because, indeed, it is a travesty.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. I thank my friend and my colleague.
Mr. Speaker, defending the sanctity of American democracy is more
important than any partisan consideration. We are at a juncture at
which we will experience a President-elect who has displayed
breathtaking ignorance about the powers and the basic functions of
government and who has identified the nominees for these cabinet
positions who, if confirmed, will dismantle equality, equity, and
opportunity at every turn, capped off by a Republican-controlled
Congress that would rather make good on divisive rhetoric instead of
working in the best interests of Americans.
There is just so much at stake as we go forth in the next couple of
weeks and as the President-elect identifies and puts forth his
nominees. Whether it is in the Department of State or in the Department
of Education or in Energy or in HUD or in Health and Human Services or
in Justice or in the Environmental Protection Agency--where a nominee,
as Attorney General, spends his time dismantling and litigating against
the Environmental Protection Agency--or whether it is Labor, where the
Labor Secretary doesn't seem to care about working individuals and
protecting workers' rights, or whether it is an SBA administrator who
doesn't have any idea what it is to be a part of a working class or a
middle class, or whether it is even the Treasurer of the country, who
comes from massive wealth and Big Business, each of these
illustrations, in combination with there being the decisions already to
dismantle--to take health care away from millions of families, to
create the loss of jobs as a result of dismantling the Affordable Care
Act without placing anything in its place--represent the dismantling of
the democracy that we have fought so hard to sustain.
If we are going to watch these serious attacks on the equality and
opportunity for all people, then we must make sure that the people in
this country see these things. I have a question for all of us to
answer. As we look toward all of these issues, either individually or
collectively, at what point do we conclude with the question: Is what
is happening in America un-American?
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Higgins of Louisiana). Members are
reminded to refrain from engaging in personalities toward the
President-elect or a sitting Senator.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, as a senior member of the House
Committees on the Judiciary and Homeland Security Committee; Ranking
Member of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland
Security, and Investigations, and the Congressional Voting Rights
Caucus, I rise today to express my views regarding the more troubling
nominations made by the President-Elect to fill the important Cabinet
posts at the Departments of Justice, Health and Human Services, and
Energy.
Let me begin with the nomination of U.S. Senator Jefferson Beauregard
``Jeff'' Sessions III of Alabama to be the next Attorney General of the
United States.
Mr. Speaker, those of us who oppose the nomination of Senator
Sessions to be Attorney General owe a responsibility to the public to
clear and forthright in stating the reasons they believe he should not
be confirmed as the Attorney General of the United States.
Many of the senator's supporters, ranging from his Republican
colleagues in the Senate to current and former staffers to home state
friends and constituents, praise the senator for his modesty and
courtesy and manners.
The four-term senator and former state and federal prosecutor is, we
are told, learned in the law, a person of deep faith, a good man who
loves his family, his state, and his country.
We can, as the lawyers say, stipulate that these assertions are true.
But that does not make him an appropriate and deserving candidate to
be Attorney General of the United States.
And that is because the office of Attorney General and the Department
of Justice he or she leads is different in a very fundamental way from
every other Cabinet department.
Unlike the Secretary of Transportation or Commerce or Education, or
even the Secretary of Defense or State, the Attorney General leads a
department that is charged with administering the laws and enforcing
the Constitutional guarantees and protections that directly affect
every American, all 320 million of us.
To quote then-Senator Joseph Biden during the 2001 confirmation
hearing of Attorney General nominee John Ashcroft:
``This Cabinet position is the single most unique position of any
Cabinet office.''
``For it's the only one where the nominee or the Cabinet officer has
an equally strong and stronger, quite frankly, responsibility to the
American people as he does to the person who nominates him.''
At that same confirmation hearing, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois
observed that ``the attorney general, more than any other Cabinet
officer, is entrusted with protecting the civil rights of Americans.''
The Attorney General is not the lawyer for the President; the
Attorney General is the lawyer, and the Department of Justice the law
firm, for the American people.
That is why I agree so strongly with then-Senator Biden when he said
in 2001:
``[F]or the office of attorney general, first, the question is
whether the attorney general is willing to vigorously enforce all the
laws in the Constitution, even though he might have philosophical
disagreements.''
``[The second question is] whether he possesses the standing and
temperament that will permit the vast majority of the American people
to believe that you can and will protect and enforce their individual
rights.''
Put another way, the U.S. Attorney General and Justice Department is
not only the instrument of justice but also the living symbol of the
Constitution's promise of equal justice under law.
Mr. Speaker, the nation's greatest Attorney Generals conveyed this
commitment to equal justice by their prior experience, their words and
deed, and their character.
Think Herbert Brownell, Attorney General for Republican President
Eisenhower, who overaw the integration of Little Rock's Central High
School.
Think Robert Jackson, Attorney General for Democratic President
Franklin Roosevelt, who led the prosecution team at the Nazi War Crimes
trial in Nuremburg, Germany.
Think Robert F. Kennedy, for whom the Main Justice Building is named,
bringing to bear the instruments of federal power to protect
Mississippi Freedom Riders and to stare down Governor George Wallace in
the successful effort to integrate the University of Alabama.
The nomination of Alabama Senator Sessions as Attorney General does
not inspire the necessary confidence.
As a U.S. Senator from Alabama, the state from which the infamous
Supreme Court decision in Shelby County v. Holder originated, Senator
Sessions has failed to play a constructive role in repairing the damage
to voting rights caused by that decision.
He was one of the leading opponents of the reauthorization of the
Violence Against Women Act.
He is one of the Senate's most hostile opponents of comprehensive
immigration reform and was a principal architect of the draconian and
incendiary immigration policy advocated by the President-Elect during
the campaign.
And his record in support of efforts to bring needed reform to the
nation's criminal justice system is virtually non-existent.
In 1986, ten years before Senator Sessions was elected to the Senate,
he was rejected for a U.S. District Court judgeship in view of
documented incidents that revealed his lack of commitment to civil and
voting rights, and to equal justice.
And his Senate voting record and rhetoric has endeared him to white
nationalist websites and organizations like Breitbart and Stormfront.
As a U.S. attorney, Senator Sessions was the first federal prosecutor
in the country to bring charges against civil rights activist for voter
fraud.
Senator Sessions charged the group with 29 counts of voter fraud,
facing over 100 years in prison.
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Senator Sessions has repeatedly denied the disproportionate impact of
voting restrictions on minorities and has been a leader in the effort
to undermine the protections of the Voting Rights Act.
Senator Sessions has spoken out against the Voting Rights Act,
calling it ``a piece of intrusive legislation.''
Senator Sessions criticized Attorney General Eric Holder for
challenging state election laws, claiming they are necessary to fight
voter fraud.
However, evidence supports that voter fraud is almost nonexistent,
with 31 confirmed cases out of more than 1 billion ballots cast.
As Attorney General of the state of Alabama, Senator Sessions fought
to continue practices that harmed schools predominantly attended by
African-American students.
Senator Sessions led the fight to uphold the state of Alabama's
inequitable school funding mechanism after it had been deemed
unconstitutional by the Alabama circuit court.
In the state of Alabama nearly a quarter of African-American students
attend apartheid schools, meaning the school's white population is less
than one percent.
Although Senator Sessions has publicly taken credit for desegregation
efforts in the state of Alabama, there is no evidence of his
participation in the desegregation of Alabama schools or any school
desegregation lawsuits filed by then Attorney General Sessions.
Mr. Speaker, The United States has been blessed to have been served
as Attorney General by such illustrious figures as Robert Jackson,
Robert Kennedy, Herbert Brownell, Ramsey Clark, Nicholas Katzenbach,
Eric Holder, and Edward H. Levi.
Nothing would do more to reassure the American people that the
President-Elect is committed to unifying the nation than the nomination
and appointment of a person to be Attorney General who has a record of
championing and protecting, rather than opposing and undermining, the
precious right to vote; the constitutionally guaranteed right of
privacy, criminal justice reform, and support for reform of the
nation's immigration system so that it is fair and humane.
Regrettably, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama is not that person and he
should not be confirmed by the Senate to be the nation's 84th Attorney
General.
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