[Congressional Record Volume 166, Number 103 (Wednesday, June 3, 2020)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2669-S2670]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 604
Mr. President, as in legislative session, I ask unanimous consent
that the Senate proceed to the immediate consideration of S. Res. 604,
which was submitted earlier today. I further ask that the resolution be
agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, and the motions to reconsider be
considered made and laid upon the table with no intervening action or
debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Scott of Florida). Is there objection?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Idaho.
Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, what you are
seeing here today is a pure, unadulterated exercise in politics--
politics that are steeped with the difference of political philosophy
between the two parties.
With relation to the complaint that my colleague has just made that
this nomination hasn't been adequately vetted, this nomination was made
2 years ago tomorrow, June 4, 2018.
Mr. Pack came before the committee. He has been before the committee
twice. He has produced numerous documents due to the complaints of the
Democrats on the committee. He has been looked at by the White House.
His business dealings have been looked at by the Justice Department, by
the Internal Revenue Service, and he has been cleared of anything.
The U.S. Agency for Global Media is an important agency because it is
charged with supporting international broadcasting outlets around the
world in the face of the kinds of misinformation and things that are
put out by other countries that are untrue.
The real reason for the objection to Mr. Pack's nomination is that
this man is a patriot. This is a man who makes documentary films that
portray the greatness of America.
Anyone who disagrees with that ought to spend the time to look at the
documentary he just made, which was run on public TV within the last 30
days, regarding Clarence Thomas and what he had to go through to get on
the Supreme Court. It was a superb representation of what happened in
that. If you watch that, you will see why the Democrats are absolutely
opposed to Mr. Pack.
But don't take our word for this. RealClearPolitics, after this whole
thing started, did its own investigation into this, and they noted that
the business arrangements of Mr. Pack used to make these documentaries
are very common for documentary filmmakers and, like Pack, filmmakers
and television producers also use nonprofits to collect contributions
from donors and then set up a for-profit company to make these films.
This is exactly what Senator Merkley was objecting to.
Having said that, they went on to interview others, including
attorneys and everything else. Another producer with no business ties
to Pack told RealClearPolitics ``that he set up the same two-pronged
way of funding films last year on the advice of counsel, who told him
it was standard operating procedure.''
This has been looked at. It has been reviewed. Look, the committee
has had this in its hands for almost 2 years. I have been really
patient. Every time that I set this for a hearing and they wanted more
time, I let that go.
Finally, the last time, I was really, really disappointed in the
Democrats' engagement of the political system, enjoining it with the
potential criminal justice system, to try to stop this.
The night before the business meeting, I got a letter from the
attorney general for the District of Columbia--obviously a partisan
individual--that says that he is going to look at this and, therefore,
he is investigating it. The Democrats then said: Well, we can't go
ahead with this because he is being investigated by this partisan
person from DC.
Look, I am on the Ethics Committee. There are six of us. Half of us
sit on the Foreign Relations Committee. In every instance I can think
of on the Ethics Committee where the U.S. Justice Department has asked
us to stand down because they were doing a legitimate criminal
investigation, we have done so.
In this particular case, it was a partisan agency of the District of
Columbia that noticed that they were going to do this investigation.
I started my career as a prosecutor. I have always felt that the
justice system and the prosecuting system should be above politics, but
to get a partisan individual to send a letter--after 2 years--on the
eve of the business meeting, that he was going to open a business
meeting again, after many delays, was just too much.
But I did delay the business meeting for 1 week, and after that 1
week we had a business meeting. The Democrats made motion after motion
to delay. Again, I was as patient as I could be.
I said during these motions that we were only going to go on so long
with this. Finally, as was noted by some of the attorneys in the room,
had this occurrence happened in a court of law, the attorneys would
have been held in contempt of court for making repetitive motions that
were obviously delay motions and done spuriously.
So, after the eighth motion, I declared the motions out of order, and
we went to what democracies do. We went to a vote. To no one's
surprise, it was a straight party-line vote: 12 votes to send Mr.
Pack's confirmation to the floor for confirmation and 10 votes against
that.
This is a democracy. The way we do this is we have disagreements,
particularly when it comes to political matters such as this, but to
try to engage the justice system in this I find just really, really
disheartening.
We are going to have a vote on Mr. Pack, and it is very simple. If
you don't want Mr. Pack to take this job, then you vote no, and if you
do, then you say yes. But this has been investigated back and forth.
Regardless of the breast-beating and the rending of garments over what
an awful person he is and how awful his businesses have been, keep in
mind, this is all politics. If you see the kind of work that he has
done, he makes America proud when he makes a documentary.
So I would object to the resolution that has been proposed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The Senator from New Jersey
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I ask to speak for up to 5 minutes
before the vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I want to, first of all, thank Senator
Merkley for his leadership on the resolution and for his thoughtful and
substantive contributions as a member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and to express our deep disappointment that our Republican
colleagues are blocking his resolution, which basically says that we
should not move forward on a nominee--in this case, this nominee--when
there are false statements to the IRS and to the Foreign Relations
Committee for which he refuses to correct the record, which would have
consequences. Those are indisputable.
It is abundantly clear that we need to formalize some standards that
apply equally to all nominees, Democrat and Republican alike, and we
should think of it as a floor beneath which the Senate should not fall.
Now, it is amazing to me that I know my Republican colleagues used to
care about tax issues. As a matter of fact, they denied a previous
distinguished majority leader of the Senate--on some arcane issue--the
opportunity to become the Secretary of Health and Human Services. They
have done it a bunch of times.
This issue is a $4 million tax issue in which Mr. Pack took his
nonprofit, totally controlled by him--totally controlled by him--and
had all the moneys that were solicited to the nonprofit then sent to
his for-profit company, totally controlled by him--totally controlled
by him. And no other disbursements were made from the nonprofit for
anyone else, for any other entity.
I didn't hear until now that the Justice Department and the IRS has
reviewed this. It should be forthcoming, then, that they have cleared
this, that this is now in the course of business. We can create a
nonprofit; go ahead and get moneys from people; they will get their
deductions; and then we can send it to ourselves for profit. That is
one heck of a process.
Now, the chairman continues to say ``2 years.'' Well, 2 years ago
there was a Republican chairman of the committee--our colleague Bob
Corker. He
[[Page S2670]]
did not move this nomination 2 years ago. So with this constant refrain
of 2 years, I guess you want to blame former Senator Corker for not
moving it during that period of time.
At the chairman's request, I met with Mr. Pack. While he may not have
been my nominee, I agreed to have a hearing, which is one of the
standards we have in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. There is
an agreement between the chair and ranking. That has been violated for
Mr. Pack. He actually went to a vote before the committee without my
agreement, so that comity has been violated for the future.
At the end of the day, we have someone who will not ultimately--he
says: Yes, I made a ``mistake''--it is a $4 million mistake--and, yes,
I should have answered differently.
Well, why not correct it? If it is so simple, if it is so benign, why
not correct it? The reason you don't want to correct it is that there
are consequences that flow from that correction, including probably an
IRS investigation.
Finally, it is interesting that, I guess, when Attorney General Barr
does something, it is not political, but when the attorney general of
the District of Columbia does it, it is political. I didn't know we
were going to start choosing and picking which law enforcement entities
are political in this country.
The attorney general of the District of Columbia had an investigation
that was preceding before any action of the committee--preceding before
any action of the committee or any information brought to the attention
of the attorney general. Evidently, he considers it significantly
serious enough--potential IRS violations on taxes.
So here are our Republican colleagues who, in the past, railed
against anyone who had violations of the IRS Tax Code, saying they are
not worthy of being a nominee, to going ahead and ramming through
someone who ultimately has some serious issues to the tune of $4
million, and that is not a problem. Under investigation--that is not a
problem.
So I urge my colleagues to consider what you are doing here. Not only
was a precedent set at the committee, but you will set a precedent on
the floor, and it will be very hard for you to get up and rail about
somebody's tax liabilities and what they did and didn't do honestly
with the taxes at the end of the day.
With that, I yield the floor.