[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 73 (Friday, April 28, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2633-S2634]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, as we know, the Senate is considering a
stopgap--continuing resolution--to keep the government of the American
people open for business. The stopgap, of course, helps us forget the
fact that in November we had all the appropriations bills ready to go,
but the leadership asked us to hold it off.
Now, I am going to support this 1-week continuing resolution, because
I believe we are close to a bipartisan agreement that would avoid the
devastating consequences of a government shutdown and save the Congress
from once again facing the disruption and humiliation of failing to
meet Congress's obligation to fund the basic functions of our
government.
[[Page S2634]]
But we shouldn't be in this situation. We shouldn't have allowed
partisan politics to once again turn a looming deadline into a
political standoff and what is really a manufactured crisis.
As I have said, our work could have been and should have been
completed in November. We were prepared to do that. We were 90 percent
to the finish line--98 percent, actually, to the finish line.
Republicans and Democrats had worked together. But at the request of
then-President-Elect Trump, all work ground to a halt. For 5 months we
have faced one partisan obstacle after another from the Trump
administration, including a demand to fund a misguided wall on the
southern border at the expense of billions of dollars that would have
to be paid for--not by Mexico or anybody else. It would be paid for by
the American taxpayers. The administration then threatened to hold
hostage the basic health insurance of millions of Americans, crippling
the Affordable Care Act. This is more than insulting. It is malicious,
and it is wrong.
Now the other side of the aisle is holding the budget of the American
people hostage, insisting we include dozens of poison pill riders as
the price for funding the people's government and to advance their
partisan agenda on abortion, Dodd-Frank, Wall Street reforms, and the
environment.
The Republicans control both Houses of Congress and the White House.
If they want to pass legislation on these divisive issues, then bring
the bills to the floor and vote on them, instead of trying to hide them
in an appropriations bill. If they really believe in all these poison
pill amendments, then vote on them. Bring up legislation. They control
the House and the Senate. They can bring it up anytime they want.
Partisan politics should not be tied to must-pass spending bills,
because it is never the right time to play politics with the lives of
the American people and the government of the wealthiest and most
powerful Nation on Earth.
I think it is very obvious why they want to hide them in an
appropriations bill. They don't want to vote on it and give great
speeches on the wall, on our southern border. They know that they don't
have enough Republican votes to pass it.
One party now controls the White House and both Chambers of Congress.
It is incumbent upon the Republicans to ensure that the government of
the American people stays open and is fully funded. I am afraid that
the partisan bluster threatens to derail months of bipartisan
negotiations.
As vice chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, I have
been involved in those negotiations. Charles Kieffer and Chanda
Betourney have worked almost around the clock for weeks representing us
on the Appropriations Committee. If the bluster and the posturing would
stop, we could wrap this up.
I hope that with one more week, our bipartisan and our bicameral
negotiations, consistent with the bipartisan budget agreement and
without poison pills, can continue, because this is no way to govern.
To date, negotiations have produced many positive outcomes for the
American people. We have increased investments in the National
Institutes of Health. We secured full year Pell grants. We made
investments in transit.
As to something that should be of concern to every single Senator
from every single State, we made funding available to address the
opioid crisis. That is not a Democratic or Republican issue. That is a
human issue. Every single State in this country is facing an opioid
crisis. I am pleased that Republicans and Democrats came together to
address it.
Let's not govern by partisan manufactured crises. Let's do what the
American people expect us to do and come together to pay the bills of
our country. Stop posturing. We are the greatest democracy on Earth,
the most powerful and the wealthiest Nation on Earth. Let's start
acting that way. Let's start governing as we should. Let's not hide
these divisive issues in an appropriations bill. Let's have votes
straight up or down. Let people vote and show their constituents, the
American people, where they stand. Don't hide behind a must-pass
appropriations bill. It is not the way we should govern. It is not the
way I want to do it. I am perfectly willing to cast votes on major
issues, even if they are controversial.
We have 6-year terms here. We ought to be willing to be the
conscience of the Nation. That is what the Senate is supposed to be. In
my years here, I have seen times when we have been under both
Republican and Democratic leadership. We are not acting as the
conscience of the Nation now. We have to go back to that. I really hope
we will.
We have good men and women in this body on both sides of the aisle.
Let's start showing the conscience of this great Nation. Let's start
governing in reality, not by rhetoric. Governing is not a Twitter feed.
Governing is debating the issues and coming to a conclusion for the
American people.
I see nobody else seeking recognition.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Kennedy). The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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