[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 56 (Thursday, March 30, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H2578-H2585]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TOPICS OF THE DAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2017, the gentleman from Iowa (Mr. King) is recognized for
60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, it is my privilege to be recognized to
address you here on the floor of the United States House of
Representatives and to once again continue this dialogue that we have
with you, all of our Members and staff and the American people.
To initiate this dialogue, I yield to the gentleman from Wisconsin
(Mr. Gallagher) of the Eighth Congressional District, born in Green
Bay.
American Exceptionalism
Mr. GALLAGHER. Mr. Speaker, every time I have the privilege of
addressing this body, I am reminded of
[[Page H2579]]
how lucky we all are to live in a country where I am free to speak my
mind without fear of retribution or retaliation. It is one of the great
privileges of being an American. Yet for far too many around the world,
freedom of conscience is still a distant dream.
Nowhere is this more apparent than in Russia, where Vladimir Putin's
thuggish regime has poisoned the promise of the post-Soviet era and day
by day has slid Russia back into the dark shadows of autocracy. Just
last Sunday, thousands of Russians took to the streets and squares in
protest of the Kremlin's corruption. And in return, Russian police
arrested hundreds of protesters, including Vladimir Putin's political
challenger, Alexei Navalny.
But the Putin regime's barbarity isn't just a polite policy
difference. Russians of exceptional courage are dying, including as
recently as last week, as the regime cultivates an atmosphere of fear
and intimidation.
Vladimir Putin's campaign of murder is not limited to domestic
political opponents. Like all dictators, Putin seeks to rally his
nation's support by channeling public fear and anger against external
enemies. Time and again, first in Georgia, then in Ukraine, and now in
Syria, Vladimir Putin has warned us exactly who he is. As recent as
last night, the commander of CENTCOM announced that Russia is likely
providing support to the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, I am afraid we have exhausted our warnings. Russian
aggression, if left unchecked, may soon cross a line past which there
is no return.
You see, what Vladimir Putin wants is fundamentally at odds with
American interests. After the Second World War, America laid the
foundation for a new and better world, drawn together by common values
and forged from the fires of war. We did this not just because we are a
generous people but because we are a wise people.
Farsighted American statesmen realized that creating the architecture
for peace in Europe was a far better investment than returning to
isolationism and then one day having to pay the butcher's bill, as we
did twice during the first half of the 20th century.
As Europe is changing, Vladimir Putin dreams of restoring the Soviet
Union's prestige and power, and his ultimate goal is clear: the end of
the postwar-American project in Europe and the return of power politics
unencumbered by the rules of the road that we established to our
benefit in concert with our allies.
And so the stakes, in my mind, could not be any higher. If we do not
stand up to Putin now, his aggression will continue until one day he
goes too far. On that day, we may face an unimaginable choice between
war or the destruction of the NATO alliance. And whichever we choose,
we will have lost.
Despite Putin telling us exactly who he is, I have heard some say we
should try to work with Russia to find areas of common ground. Yet we
have seen firsthand how the last administration's reset has not led to
better relations but to a tide of Russian aggression.
I do not believe Putin desires war with the United States. What he
desires is the fruits of conquest without the cost. He holds the cards
of a bluffer, and he is gradually raising the stakes in an effort to
get us to fold. Fortunately, it is the U.S., not Russia, who holds the
stronger hand. We cannot, and we must not, give Putin the acquiescence
he requires to succeed in his plot to overturn the world we created.
When it comes to Russia's interference in our elections, we must put
the country and the sanctity of our democracy far above partisan
interests. For any American to collaborate against our own government
with a government that seeks to undermine our country would, indeed, be
nothing short of treasonous. But I call on my Democrat friends to
resist the urge to treat this critical issue as nothing more than an
opportunity to score political points.
And I call on my fellow Republicans to unwaveringly pursue
investigations into efforts by Vladimir Putin to undermine our
democracy, wherever they may lead.
I will close with this, Mr. Speaker. In our twilight struggle against
the clouds of dictatorship, we must maintain what the former Soviet
dissident Natan Sharansky calls moral clarity. Sharansky contrasts free
societies with fear societies, where citizens live in perpetual unease.
While even free societies are not perfect, they must never play into
the hands of fear society propagandists who assert the dubious sense of
moral relativism.
After all of these years, we are still Ronald Reagan's America--a
light on a hill shining brightly as a beacon for all mankind. There is
no moral equivalence between the United States and any society based
upon fear, let alone Vladimir Putin's Russia.
American exceptionalism remains buried deep in all our bones. We are
not just a free society; we are the model free society. Our values and
our deeds will endure long after each of us in this Chamber is gone.
Mr. Speaker, the conflict before us is a simple one: we cannot fall
prey to false equivalencies or fail to recognize our adversaries for
who they are. Let us steel ourselves today in this Chamber and rise to
stop Mr. Putin's aggression in its tracks, both against our own Nation
and against those who have proven themselves to be our closest friends
and allies.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Wisconsin
for his statement here and for bringing up the topic of American
exceptionalism and bringing us back through some of this history that
we need to revisit from time to time. That statement is very valuable
to us.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Babin), an
exceptional American in his own right.
Terminate Grants to Sanctuary Cities
Mr. BABIN. Mr. Speaker, I wish to thank the gentleman from Iowa, my
good friend for yielding to me.
I rise to express my strong support for the announced policy by
Attorney General Jeff Sessions that will terminate U.S. Department of
Justice grants to sanctuary cities. These are the localities that have
chosen not to cooperate with the Federal Government when its seeks to
deport already-detained criminal aliens.
Under this Trump policy, your hard-earned tax dollars will no longer
go to cities and counties that thumb their nose at the Federal
immigration authorities and refuse to cooperate.
In President Trump's first 2 months in office, this administration
has acted to secure our borders, to encourage compliance with Federal
immigration law, and to deport criminal aliens. The previous
administration put out the welcome mat for criminal aliens. Thanks to
Trump, the welcome mat has now been removed.
A few short days ago, the national news broke on how two illegal
aliens from Central America raped a 14-year-old girl in the boys
bathroom of a public high school in Rockville, Maryland. These two
young men, Henry Sanchez-Milian, an 18-year-old from Guatemala, and
Jose Montano, a 17-year-old from El Salvador, came across our southern
border last year as unaccompanied minors. The Obama administration
initially targeted them for deportation proceedings, but they were
later released to join relatives in Maryland.
When asked about the situation, Rockville school officials said that
the legal status of these two individuals did not matter, as Rockville
has declared itself to be a sanctuary city. I beg to differ. It does
matter. If the Federal Government had done its duty and immediately
returned these illegal immigrants to their home country, this young
girl would not have been brutally raped.
For the sake of this young girl, we must secure our borders. This
vicious crime would never have taken place had the Obama administration
followed the law and secured our borders. The good news is that the new
administration is working hard to secure our borders, to deport
criminal aliens, and to protect the lives of American citizens.
Cracking down on sanctuary cities is an important first step. In the
first month of the Trump administration, ICE issued 3,083 detainers.
These are orders for local authorities to keep criminal aliens in
custody for 48 hours to enable U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, or ICE, agents to come and get these criminal aliens for
deportation. 206 of these detainees were just declined, meaning that
local authorities deliberately ignored ICE's detainer requests and
released these individuals back out onto American streets.
[[Page H2580]]
This is especially concerning because 44 percent of those individuals
had already been convicted of crimes in the United States. These
weren't just petty crimes, folks. These include: homicide, rape,
assault, domestic violence, indecent exposure with a minor, sex offense
against a minor, aggravated assault with a weapon, resisting an
officer, vehicle theft, kidnapping, driving under the influence, hit-
and-run, and sexual assault.
Thank you, Mr. President, for holding accountable these sanctuary
cities that released these criminals back out onto our streets.
We are also working to force foreign countries to take back their
criminal alien citizens; 25-year-old Casey Chadwick was murdered by an
illegal alien from Haiti, Jean Jacques. Jacques had been released 6
months earlier and ordered deported after serving a 19-year sentence
for attempted murder.
Haiti had refused multiple times to take back Jacques, and under the
Obama administration policy, Jacques was simply released onto U.S.
streets to return to his life of crime, although Haiti had gladly taken
billions of U.S. aid. That is why I have introduced H.R. 82, the
Criminal Alien Deportation Enforcement Act. My bill withholds foreign
aid from countries that do not repatriate their criminal aliens.
This commonsense step ensures that countries that benefit from the
goodwill of the United States must hold up their end of the bargain and
take back their criminal aliens. And through his recent executive
order, President Trump declared that he would restrict the issuance of
visas to certain residents of noncooperative countries. Congress should
support the President by locking in this enforcement with legislation
so that a future President does not reverse this enforcement.
{time} 1115
On behalf of the American people, I applaud President Trump and I
call on my colleagues to cosponsor my legislation to lock in these
protections for future generations of Americans and keep them safe.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Reclaiming my time, I would like to pose a question
to the gentleman from Texas.
The bill that you have proposed that mirrors the President's
executive order to limit people coming in from those six countries, do
you have the bill number for that? H.R.?
Mr. BABIN. That is H.R. 80.
Mr. KING of Iowa. 880?
Mr. BABIN. H.R. 80.
The gentleman from Iowa, I am going to correct myself. That is H.R.
81, H.R. 81.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Okay. And you also have H.R. 82.
Mr. BABIN. I have H.R. 82, which I just discussed, and that is the
repatriation of criminal aliens.
Mr. KING of Iowa. For the record, I believe I am a cosponsor of both
of those pieces of legislation.
Mr. BABIN. You are, Mr. King. You are a sponsor. And I thank you for
your cosponsorship and trying to keep our American citizens, our
constituents, safe.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Reclaiming my time from the gentleman from Texas, I
appreciate the approach that you brought to this Congress. It is not
hard for me to get behind, and I support legislation that is brought by
Mr. Babin. He has been looking at the safety and security of the
American people and coming up with good, solid, principled ideas on how
to restore and strengthen our national security.
Each of those two pieces of legislation, the numbers which I did not
know until now, H.R. 81 and H.R. 82, are pieces of legislation that I
and many other conservatives have signed on to in our endeavor to make
Americans safe again. This great America, making it great again, part
of it is to make America safe again.
I would add to this, Mr. Speaker, that I am appalled at the audacity
of the judges who are either out on the left coast or well beyond the
left coast, as far west as Hawaii, who would just step in without any
kind of a constitutional, foundational background in their arguments or
decisions, without citing the statute is this, that Congress has the
authority to control immigration in the United States of America.
If we want to pass a piece of legislation and it is in law that says
the only people that we will let come into America are green Martians,
then that is the law, and that is what a judge is obligated to
determine when they read the law.
But on top of that, not only does Congress set the terms on what
legal immigration is into America--and it is clear and it is defined--
but we grant the President of the United States the authority to
determine those who will not be allowed to come into America, just like
any other sovereign nation-state in the world that controls its
borders.
And if we don't have the authority, if Congress doesn't have the
constitutional authority that is clearly defined, and if the statutes
that are produced by Congress and signed into law by previous
Presidents do not set that statutory authority on who comes into
America but a judge someplace in Seattle or Hawaii can supercede the
will of the American people, can supercede the supreme law of the land,
the Constitution of the United States, can supercede Federal law just
because, in their whim, they think a law might mean something that it
doesn't say, that is what we are dealing with, Mr. Speaker. I intend to
move further on this and examine these judges more closely.
As a matter of fact--and I thank the gentleman from Texas. But we had
a hearing either earlier this week or last week--and my weeks run
together, Mr. Speaker--and this hearing was a hearing where we
discussed some of this statutory authority.
In fact, it was this week. I remember one of the witnesses, and the
witness was a Sheriff Hodgson out of Maryland; and he testified that a
State legislator in Maryland had learned that there was likely to be an
ICE raid into a particular community, and the representative posted on
their Facebook, essentially: Don't go out of your homes. Be careful
because you might be picked up and deported if you are illegally in
America.
That heads-up from an elected State official, I asked him this
question, and his answer concurred with my opinion, that it is a direct
violation of 8 U.S.C. 1324, which is a Federal ban on harboring illegal
aliens. To harbor them, to encourage them to come here or stay here--
and it can be either willfully or for financial purposes. If that is
the case, they are facing a Federal felony of up to 10 years in a
penitentiary; that is, if it is for profit. But if it is not for
profit, then they are only facing 5 years in a Federal penitentiary for
facilitating illegal immigration, harboring illegal aliens.
When I read the statute into the Record before the Judiciary
Committee, it was clear to me that Sheriff Hodgson had read that
statute multiple times. I don't know that he had it completely
memorized, but he knew exactly what it meant; and he concurred with me
that I believe the Justice Department should be investigating, should
be looking into State legislators or any citizen--they are subject to
the same laws as all the rest of us--who is harboring illegal aliens.
We should bring this on the highest profile level that we can.
And furthermore, we have a judge out in Washington, again, who,
according to news reports, helped facilitate an illegal alien who was
before this judge's court to go out the back door when there were ICE
agents waiting, guarding the front door. That also is a violation of 8
U.S.C. 1324, harboring illegal aliens.
So Congress passes laws, and these laws are to be respected; and we
cannot be a real civilization if we don't have respect for the rule of
law, Mr. Speaker. And not only has respect for the rule of law been so
eroded, we had a previous President, and that is President Obama, who
openly and blatantly violated the supreme law of the land, the
Constitution, according to his definition.
Twenty-two times Barack Obama said he didn't have the authority to
grant a legal status to the people who are defined as DREAMers, the
deferred action for children of--I guess they say--well, it is children
of aliens is what it really is. But President Obama, 22 times on
videotape and who knows how may times it wasn't on videotape, said: I
don't have the constitutional authority to change the law. Congress has
to do that.
When he was pressed to change the law and he said he didn't have that
authority those 22 times, then he concluded that he could get away with
it
[[Page H2581]]
anyway. He issued the order, the DACA order--two of them that are
really openly and blatantly unconstitutional. DAPA, the Deferred Action
for Parents of Americans, that is how they called it. Again, it is
parents of those who were born here to illegal parents, and we need to
move the birthright citizenship bill to put an end to that.
The President knew he didn't have the authority for that DAPA
program, and he knew he didn't have the authority for the DACA program,
and he said so at least 22 times. Then he issued those orders, and the
executive branch of government began to carry out the President's
orders, which are in violation of the law. So he has commanded the
executive branch of government to violate the law.
Subsequent to the DACA order going out, President Obama went to
Chicago and gave a speech and said publicly--and this is on videotape,
too. He said this: I changed the law.
Mr. Speaker, no President ever had constitutional authority to change
the law. It is Congress that writes all the laws in the House and in
the Senate. The President gets an opportunity to sign them into law,
and, as President, he is free to lobby the Congress to change the law.
But no President should have the audacity to stand up in front of his
hometown and the world and say: I changed the law.
Now, do we remember, Mr. Speaker, that there was a big national
outrage over that statement or over the constitutional violations? No.
There wasn't a great outrage. I am greatly outraged, and I remain
outraged, but the American people were relatively complacent about
this.
Now, there were plenty of them that did some work on this, true, but
it wasn't like a big cultural movement. I would remind you about what
happens when we are extremely offended by violations of law and
decency. That is when Republicans and Democrats get together and do
something about it.
One of those things I can think of, Mr. Speaker, is this. I reach in
my pocket and I pull out--this is an acorn. I carry an acorn in my
pocket every day, and I have done that for, oh, I don't know how long
now--pretty close to 10 years.
But I brought an amendment to the floor of the House of
Representatives to cut off all funding to ACORN about 2 years before we
heard of the videotapes that came out of ACORN that were collected by
James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles because I knew what was going on. I had
had an investigator that was feeding me information. And I came to the
floor and made an effort to cut off all the funding that was supporting
ACORN, which admitted later on to 440- or maybe 444,000 false or
fraudulent voter registration forms that they paid people commissions
to produce.
Some of those forms included Mickey Mouse and the entire Dallas
Cowboys football team, all registered to vote.
ACORN employees were paid on commission to collect the voter
registrations. They were subverting our electoral process. They were
advocating all kinds of things from within ACORN and helping to
facilitate, as we know the allegation, prostitution and others.
This was so bad--this was so bad that Democrats were outraged. I
know, Mr. Speaker, it is hard to fathom this now. But Democrats were
outraged. Republicans were outraged. And when those videos became
replete throughout the American consciousness, you--and I say, Mr.
Speaker, I say the American people rose up and they called their
Members of Congress, and they did interviews on TV, and they wrote
letters to the editor. It was the talk of the coffee shop and the
church and the school and the work and the town. America revolted at
the idea that we would be sending hundreds of millions of tax dollars
to an organization that was so immoral and so corrupt.
Underneath that was the corruption of our electoral process. So we
came together here with moral and constitutional outrage and cut off
all funding to ACORN or any of their affiliates or subordinates or
successors, and that has been part of the appropriation process here
ever since.
I carry this acorn in my pocket to remind me, to remind me not to
ever let something like that happen again. But also, it is a point of
pride for me when I hold this in my hand because I am proud of the
American people, Mr. Speaker. It was the American people that got that
done with bipartisan outrage about what was happening to our Republic
and to the legitimacy of our elections in this Republic.
And I would remind people, Mr. Speaker, that we have a Constitution
that I have said is the supreme law of the land. It is the foundation
upon which our country is built. But that foundation sits on something.
It sits on a bedrock, and the bedrock that it sits on is legitimate
elections.
We can watch our Constitution erode by decisions in the Supreme Court
and by loss of understanding of what its original meaning is and what
it is to be a constitutional and contractual guarantee to succeeding
generations, we can lose our Constitution that way, or we could just
lose our country by allowing the bedrock that our Constitution sits on,
legitimate elections, to be eroded and destroyed.
That is what I think the American people understood, maybe
instinctively, maybe intuitively, maybe intellectually, what was
happening to our country. All of that went together to build a giant
snowball of public outrage that ripped the funding out from underneath
ACORN, and we will hold that now for a long term and, hopefully, for
the very long and increasingly healthy life of this Republic.
That is what needs to happen when we are outraged, when we see our
Constitution being undermined. We did that with ACORN, and it is a
symbol of what the American people should be doing.
But when you have a President of the United States that takes an oath
of office to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the
United States so help him God, and in that oath it is specified in
another section of the Constitution that he, meaning the President,
take care that the laws be faithfully executed--we call that the Take
Care Clause--well, the President, President Obama, did not take care
that the laws be faithfully executed. He refused to enforce the law. He
refused to enforce the immigration law, and he issued orders that
ordered his subordinates throughout the executive branch of government,
including the Border Patrol, custom border protection, ICE, and USCIS,
to defy the law.
The law of the United States says that, when law enforcement
encounters someone who is unlawfully present in the United States, they
shall--not ``may,'' but ``shall''--be placed into removal proceedings.
That is the law.
Had that been the case and if the law had been followed, if the law
had been followed ever since Ronald Reagan signed the amnesty act in
1986--which, by the way, was a legal act. I thought it was poor
judgment on the part of President Reagan. He let us down on a principle
of the rule of law. Thirty-plus years ago I knew that we would be
fighting for a long, long time to restore the respect for the rule of
law, particularly with regard to immigration.
When I watched the debate take place here in this Congress and in the
House and in the Senate and I read what I could read about that, I
reasoned that, even though we were losing in the House, the rule of law
was losing in the House on the amnesty debate in 1986, and even though
the rule of law lost in the Senate, I was confident that Ronald Reagan
understood the principle that, if you reward people for breaking the
law, there would have been more people that break the law.
{time} 1130
If you say that this is the last amnesty ever, you also will have to
continually fight the argument of we didn't really mean that; there are
these other circumstances.
The three--well, it actually started out to be 1 million people that
were going to get amnesty in 1986. And the rationale, which I don't
actually think was rational, was we can't enforce the law against these
million people that are here illegally, but we need to have the rule of
law. So what we will do is we will grant an amnesty to the million
people that are here illegally.
Then our promise will be, from this point forward, everybody who
enters into the United States, or is unlawfully in the United States
will have to face the law, and we will deport everybody that has
violated our immigration laws. We will enforce the law from this point
forward, from 1986.
Ronald Reagan believed he was going to get that; and, by the way, he
did
[[Page H2582]]
command the executive branch of government, and the Republicans did run
the executive branch of government not only from 1986, but all the way
up until 1993, when Bill Clinton took office.
But what happened was they didn't get the enforcement. There was
fraud. It was well over a million people--it was closer to 3 million
people--who received amnesty under the 1986 amnesty act; and those 3
million people then were legalized in America, by law. And I don't
dispute the validity of the law, but they were rewarded for breaking
the law. That is what the amnesty did.
So I have talked to a number of them along the way, and they will
argue: Yes, we deserved amnesty. We came to America. We wanted to live
here. It is a good thing. My family is better off.
Well, is the rule of law better off, is America's Constitution better
off, is our civilization better off because we decided that we would
ignore the law and reward people for breaking it?
By the way, is the debate over? Did we restore the respect for the
rule of law since 1986, Mr. Speaker? Or, instead, have we seen the
respect for the rule of law be eroded day by day, week by week, month
by month, year by year, over the last 30-plus years since the amnesty
act of 1986?
That is what happened. Ronald Reagan saw it in his lifetime. He
recognized that and would have liked to have had that bill back again.
I have had the conversation with a glorious American, then-Attorney
General Ed Meese, III, who also recognized that the advice that
President Reagan got from his Cabinet on whether to sign the amnesty
act in 1986, whether that advice was good, and I will tell you that the
Cabinet members that I am aware of would like to have reversed that
decision after they saw the actual results.
Well, it is not that I am the most clairvoyant Member of the United
States Congress, but I can assert with great confidence here into this
Congressional Record, Mr. Speaker, I saw this coming in 1986. I wasn't
in public life. I just wanted to raise my family and run my business
and live with the freedoms that are guaranteed to me as an American
citizen under the Constitution, but I wanted the rule of law.
I had been raised with a deep and abiding respect for the law. My
father would sit me down at the supper table with the Code of Iowa on
one side and the Constitution on the other side, and he would lecture
to me how this fits. He would say over and over again: This is the law,
and you will abide by the law. If you don't like it, if you think the
law is not right, true, or just, there are means by which you go about
changing it.
You can go lobby your State Representative. You can lobby your
Congressman. You can run for office, which is what I ended up doing.
And I am here defending the Constitution and the rule of law.
But we also are a First World country. We are the leaders of
civilization for the world. We are the leaders of western civilization
for the world. We are the American civilization. The American
civilization is a dominant component of Western civilization, and if we
take the values that formed America out of the values of the world, we
don't have a lot of science and technology in progress to work with. We
don't have a lot of economic dynamism.
I know that there have been wars and there have been dictators that
have popped up within Western civilization. But, fortunately, we
haven't had a dictator pop up in our American civilization. And one of
the big reasons for that is because of our Constitution, and because we
have public debate, and we come here to the floor of the House, and
over there to the floor of the Senate, and across America, again, in
our coffee shops, in our churches, in our workplaces and out on our
parks and our streets, and we discuss this openly.
We should listen to other people's ideas and we should consider what
they have to say and we should evaluate that. That is what our Founding
Fathers envisioned. And as these ideas merge, what will happen is that
sometimes there will be people on the right that are never going to
compromise, and there will be some people on the left that are never
going to compromise.
Maybe that doesn't matter so much because the people in the middle
get to hear both of those arguments and make their own decisions, and
they can move left or they can move right. But over time, we build a
consensus. And when we get to that consensus, that is when we can move
legislation here in the House and over in the Senate and to the
President's desk for a signature, and then America continues to become
an even better place.
But we have to have open dialogue to do this, and we have to have the
rule of law that gives order to our society. If the rule of law is
sacrificed because people are ruled more by their hearts than they are
their heads, I would say: Come back to the history of America. Study
our Founding Fathers. Read the Federalist Papers. Deliberate on this
Constitution that we have, deliberate on this supreme law of the land
and understand how deep the thought that went into the words that are
there that are our guarantees.
Our Founding Fathers understood that we had to continue to educate
each generation and raise them up not only in an understanding of the
Constitution--and I double assert its original meaning--but they needed
to be raised with an American experience. That is why it is required
that our President of the United States be born in America. And that
``born in America'' is essentially shorthand for we want to ensure that
all of our Presidents are raised with an American experience. That is
how to interpret that.
I am not here to slice or dice, Mr. Speaker, the actual locations of
birth of any President. And we have seen that Congress has some
authority to address it by statute, should we choose to do that. But I
am asserting that it is essential that the American civilization be
preserved, protected, and expanded; and that we have leaders that are
raised with the American experience that will come here and defend the
American culture and civilization. And that is so important, that the
leader of our thought process, the leader of the destiny and the
direction of America is the President of the United States, our
Commander in Chief.
The words that our President says reset and redirect America. We saw
it happen under the 8 years of Barack Obama. We are seeing it begin now
under the beginnings of the 65 or 66 days of the Trump administration,
Mr. Speaker, and we have noticed that the dialog in America immediately
shifts to: What is the President thinking about? What is the President
talking about? What is the President tweeting about?
I think there is a high degree of anxiety on the part of the
mainstream media, because they are never really off the clock because
this President might wake up at 3 in the morning and send out a tweet
that resets things. And so I am fine with that. I think it is important
that we understand the thoughts of the President.
By the way, he isn't all-powerful. I used to say to the previous
President: You are only the President. It is the American people that
run this shop, and through a lot of different mechanisms.
But the President does have a lot of authority and he gets to set the
tone for the debate and he gets to define many things, but especially
the foreign policy.
But we still have this constraint, and the power of the purse exists
here, especially in the House of Representatives. If the House doesn't
appropriate money, nobody gets any money. That is kind of like when
they say: If mama ain't happy, nobody's happy. Well, if Congress
doesn't appropriate money, nobody gets any money.
So that power of the purse was designed by our Founding Fathers to be
the controlling factor of the things that go on in this country. And if
a President is out of line, we are obligated to shut the money off to
those things that are out of line. Of course, the Senate will have to
concur with any spending that the House should initiate, but just the
same, it is the power of the purse that controls much of this.
But we are to be guided and bound by the Constitution. Earlier this
morning, as the chairman of the Constitution and Civil Justice
Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, I held a hearing on
constitutional rights, in particular the Kelo decision that came down
in--if I get my date right--June 23 of 2005.
[[Page H2583]]
That decision was about property rights in New London, Connecticut,
that the local government had decided that they were going to act by
condemning the private property locally so that they could hand that
private property over for a private interest to do expansion and
development on multiple homes within the area of New London,
Connecticut.
I recall my outrage when the Supreme Court ruled that that was
constitutional; for a local government to condemn private property for
private use, all it had to do was be facilitated by local government.
I had not read the decision at that time. In fact, I hadn't read the
dissent. I had read part of the decision. But within a week, we brought
a resolution of disapproval of the Supreme Court's decision on Kelo to
the floor of this House. And, yes, I was engaged in that debate and
some of the shaping of the resolution.
But the Supreme Court of the United States, which is there to protect
the Constitution itself, to interpret the Constitution and the law,
effectively stripped three words out of the Fifth Amendment of our
Constitution.
The Fifth Amendment reads like this: `` . . . nor shall private
property be taken for public use without just compensation.''
Well, the people in New London Connecticut, particularly the Kelo
family, had their private property, their home condemned, confiscated
under eminent domain and handed over to private use and through the
entity of local government. So I was outraged. America was outraged.
By the way, that is another time like I showed you the acorn, Mr.
Speaker, but the Kelo decision was another time that the American
people rose up and said: We disagree with this decision.
And it was--the polling that I recall from the time, 11-1, opposed
the Supreme Court's decision that would allow local government to
confiscate private property.
I came to this floor to add to the debate. And at the time I was
queued up to speak, the speaker ahead of me was over at this podium,
the gentleman from Massachusetts, Mr. Barney Frank. Now, he and I had a
history of disagreeing on a lot of issues, and I expected to disagree
with Mr. Frank on that issue. So I sat here in a chair in front with my
notepad to take notes on Mr. Frank's statements so I would be prepared
to step up and rebut him because my turn was coming next.
I am writing notes furiously, keeping up with his quotes. And while
this is going on, and he was almost finished with his speech before I
realized I agreed with everything Barney Frank said on Kelo.
Everything.
So I spoke, I came down here to this podium and gave my speech, but
my speech fully supported the statement by Mr. Frank. And I added to
that, that the effect of that decision was to strip those three words
out of the Fifth Amendment ``for public use.'' I made that argument as
emphatically as I was prepared to do, that now the Fifth Amendment of
the Constitution that guarantees our property rights says: ``Nor shall
private property be taken without just compensation.''
In other words, they have to pay you for it. But you don't get to
keep your home if there is a private interest out there that can
convince a local government that they will pay more taxes on that
property than you are paying on that property.
Stripping those three words out of the Fifth Amendment was the exact
effect of the Kelo decision. I did not know it at that time because
later on is when I picked up the dissent, one of the last dissents
written by Justice O'Connor, who had exactly the same analysis in her
dissent as I had in my speech and, as I believe without utter clarity
of the statement, that Mr. Frank would have agreed with it if he didn't
say it or not.
So here we are. The American people have risen up and we have said:
We disagree with the Supreme Court. We want to restore our
Constitution, but amending it is pretty difficult.
By the way, if you wanted to amend the Fifth Amendment of the
Constitution to fix Kelo, to have the Fifth Amendment mean ``nor shall
private property be taken for public use without just compensation,''
if you want the Fifth Amendment to mean that--I asked a witness today:
How do you rewrite the Fifth Amendment and amend our Constitution when
the Supreme Court has so, I will say, subverted the meaning, they had
de facto stricken those three words out?
How do you rewrite it? Do you start with: We really mean it this time
that ``nor shall private property be taken,'' we really mean ``without
just compensation,'' we really mean it ``for public use without just
compensation''?
Do we keep adding? Do we really mean it? Or are there words in the
language that can prevent a court from doing what they decide to do
from an activist standpoint?
I don't think so. And a number of times I have tried to write
amendments to the Constitution to fix problems that have been created
by an activist court.
{time} 1145
So I will say the Kelo decision in 2005 was a precursor to things
that happened by the Supreme Court, although they are not connected and
cited; and that would be June 2015--June 24 and June 25, 2015, as a
matter of fact. It was King v. Burwell, the decision when the Supreme
Court, on a Thursday--I believe if you look at the calendar, Mr.
Speaker, it will be a Thursday, June 24, 2015, when the Supreme Court
concluded and issued a decision that they could rewrite ObamaCare, that
they could rewrite the statute--the law that was actually passed here
by hook, crook, and legislative shenanigan, but still within the
boundaries of the Constitution.
The law gave no authority to the Federal Government to establish
exchanges under ObamaCare, but the Court considered this, and they
concluded that: We must have really meant to say ``or Federal
Government'' when Congress wrote that the States may establish
exchanges. The de facto result of the King v. Burwell decision was that
the States--and added these three words, in effect--``or Federal
Government'' may establish exchanges under the law. The Supreme Court
added words to the law. If they can add words to the law, then they can
also subtract words from the law.
So I am appalled by this. This is Thursday, and before I can get my
feet back underneath me, having been essentially knocked over by a
Supreme Court truck believing that they would be bound by something
within the Constitution, before that can happen, I am pulling into a
Catholic church in Logan, Iowa, to do a 10 a.m. meeting with some
priests and members of the parish synchronized just by providence or
happenstance with former Senator Rick Santorum, who has been a
definitive voice on marriage. We were both listening to the radio as we
pulled into that church to do a joint event, and for the first time we
had heard about the Obergefell decision, the decision that came down on
Friday, June 25, 2015.
That decision goes even beyond the idea that the Court can insert
words into Federal statute that was previously duly passed by Congress
and signed by the President. And now under the gay marriage decision of
Obergefell, the Supreme Court not only found a new right in the
Constitution, they created a command in the Constitution--a command.
It is not in the Constitution about same-sex marriage. Our Founding
Fathers never envisioned such a thing. There is no one that can assert
that it was even in the imagination of any Founding Father. Neither can
they assert that it was in the imagination of anybody that was in this
Congress when the 14th Amendment was passed out of this Congress--out
of the House and the Senate--and ratified by the American people with
75 percent of the legitimate States at the time.
No one can assert that that ever was out there in, let's just say,
the emanations and penumbras of the Constitution or especially the 14th
Amendment, the equal protection clause of the Constitution. They can't
assert that.
They asserted in the Roe v. Wade decision that this right to privacy
becomes a right to abortion under any circumstances to speak of--almost
any circumstances, Mr. Speaker. They asserted that it was in the
emanations and penumbras, and they kind of made it up. They found it in
that shadowy area along the edge of the clouds that we all see
something different if we see anything at all, but they could see
something that nobody else had seen, and they wrote that into the
decision.
[[Page H2584]]
But this Obergefell decision goes even beyond that, even beyond the
audacity of Roe v. Wade, Doe v. Bolton, Griswold v. Connecticut, and
the Eisenstadt decision. It goes beyond all of those.
It is this: the Supreme Court created--not only found a right, but
they created a command in the Constitution.
And here is the command: if you are a political subdivision in
America that recognizes civil marriage, then thou shalt conduct same-
sex marriages and recognize same-sex marriages, regardless of where
they might take place, but they shall take place in your jurisdiction
as well. That is the Obergefell decision.
Now, if this had been a decision of the United States Congress, it
would have been litigated and found unconstitutional. We don't have the
enumerated power or the constitutional authority to impose same-sex
marriage on America. That is outside the reach of this Congress, and I
think there are Democrats that will agree with me on that, Mr. Speaker.
But if the States were to pass same-sex marriage laws, they do have
that constitutional authority. If that had happened in a statutory way,
I would accept that. I don't agree with it, but I would accept it as a
constitutional function of a legitimate subdivision within the United
States.
That is how we need to do things in this country, in a constitutional
fashion, not bypass the will of the people and allow the Supreme Court
to assert an authority that they do not have constitutionally. I can
chase this all the way back to Marbury v. Madison and have to take that
argument apart, I know, with some of the people that would carry on
this argument. But in the end, it is this: We get into big trouble when
we start establishing special rights for immutable characteristics.
If you look at Title VII of the Civil Rights Act--and I don't have it
committed exactly to memory, but in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act,
there is protection there for religion, but that is a specific
constitutional protection in the First Amendment. Beyond that, it is
protection for immutable characteristics that have to do with race,
ethnicity, and national origin. I am fine with putting in disability.
That is an immutable characteristic. Age is another immutable
characteristic. And sex is an immutable characteristic. Gender is not,
and sexual orientation is not.
When you go into that zone, then you are giving special protected
status for characteristics that cannot be independently identified and
can, at least potentially, be willfully changed. That is a zone that is
too blurry a zone for law, and it is a zone then for our culture to
accept, embrace, and love people of all walks of life and recognize
that we are all God's children, we are all created in His image, and
because of our immutable characteristics, they are tied to our origins.
By the way, our rights do come from God and not from government. If
we think somehow that rights come from government, then it is okay for
government to take our rights away. But they don't come from
government. Our Founding Fathers understood that. In fact, they
articulated that better than anyone ever had. They had a tough job.
They had to first understand this divine right of humanity, natural
law, as they described it. They had to first understand it, then they
had to articulate it, then they had to debate it among themselves. They
had disagreements amongst themselves, but they reached a consensus that
got to the Declaration and a consensus that got to the ratification of
the Constitution.
We fought a gruesome and a ghastly civil war to put away the sin of
slavery. That also was a movement that came from the people of America
and the people of Western civilization and the world. Slavery is an
institution that has been part of every ancient civilization back to
the beginning. America stepped up pretty early in this process. Great
Britain was ahead of us. Not many other nations beat us to that punch.
It was a brutal thing that America went through, but it was a consensus
of America in the end that ended that.
So, Mr. Speaker, I am making this point that this America that we are
is built upon the pillars of American exceptionalism. Those pillars are
inherited from Western civilization whose roots go to Western Europe,
they go to Rome, they go to Greece, and they go back to Mosaic law. We
have been a wise-enough civilization to adopt those values from outside
of Western civilization that give us vitality, just like our English
language has this unique vitality. One of the reasons for it is that it
is adaptable, it is flexible. We are not stuck in time and place. We
take on words into our language. Every year there is a list of new
words that go into the dictionary because we create them to take care
of the meaning that we need.
Daniel Hannan, a member of the European Parliament from the United
Kingdom, has written a book about the English language. I think of
Winston Churchill's book, ``A History of the English-Speaking
Peoples.'' I read that book carefully forward and back and digested it
so to speak. When I finished it, I remember I looked up at the ceiling,
and it was about 1:30 in the morning, and I thought: My gosh, wherever
the English language has gone, freedom has accompanied the language.
Now, Churchill didn't ever write that, that I recall, in his book,
but that was a conclusion that came to me. I would call it an
inescapable conclusion that might only mean ``if you think like I do.''
But he laid the case out without saying that the English language has
carried freedom.
Well, Daniel Hannan's book--the title of which I forget at the
moment, Mr. Speaker--goes further. He says that, as he sits in the
European Parliament--and he is multilingual--he will have earpieces on
listening to the interpreter while he is listening to another language
in this ear, and the language he gets interpreted into his ear doesn't
necessarily carry out the same values and meaning. His analysis is that
the English language not only is a carrier of freedom, but it is a
language that articulates freedom unique to any other, and that you
can't really understand God-given liberty without having an
understanding of the English language that has such a utility in our
carrying out and talking about our values of language and liberty.
Liberty means something different from freedom. We have got two
words, liberty and freedom. Many other languages only have one word,
and they just use that word universally. But in our spirit is this--
freedom is this: a wild coyote has freedom. He can jump the fences and
go wherever he wants to go. But freedom is different. He has that
freedom. But liberty is bridled by morality. We have liberty in
America. We are bridled by the morality of the obligation that we are a
civilization and a culture that is part of Judeo-Christianity,
descended, at a minimum, from Judeo-Christianity, and our values that
are rooted in there, as I said, are traceable back to Mosaic law.
We have to have a morality within America if we are going to be an
America that achieves and that we can aspire, that the arc of history
takes us to soaring heights instead of flattening that arc of history
out and perhaps diminishing into the Third World.
So I revere this country, Mr. Speaker, and I revere our Constitution
and our rule of law. The people in this country, all of us who are part
of this civilization and part of this culture, all of us who get up
every day and go out and do things to lift others up, all of us who
scrub out some of the things that aren't so great and elevate those
things that are great and pull ourselves together, whether it is a mom
and a child, a dad and a child, whether it is a church group, whether
it is home school, public school, or parochial school, whether it is
work, whether it is your volunteer group, if you are out there handing
out pamphlets to advance your cause and adding to the civil dialogue in
America, keep a moral foundation behind it, and add to that civil
dialogue, if we continue to do that, and if we protect, understand, and
teach the values of America, and in particular the understanding and
the original meaning of our Constitution, we will continue to be an
even greater country.
Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the privilege to address you here on the
floor of the House of Representatives. I am privileged to serve here
and privileged to have the opportunity to go home and carry out some of
the things that I have talked about here in this last hour.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
[[Page H2585]]
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