[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 2, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S975-S977]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                 Unanimous Consent Request--S.J. Res. 7

  Mr. LEE. Madam President, the Minor Consent for Vaccinations 
Amendment Act of 2020 is a measure adopted by the District of Columbia 
that would allow for children 11 years old and older to consent on 
their own, without their parents' knowledge or acquiescence or consent, 
to being vaccinated. They could receive a vaccine, contrary to the 
wishes of their parents or without them even knowing.
  Young children don't necessarily know their own medical histories, 
their families' medical histories, potential allergies, nor do they 
have the adult judgment that is sometimes needed to make an informed 
decision as to consent for a particular medical procedure or treatment 
or even vaccination, which is exactly why parents make healthcare 
decisions on behalf of their own children.

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  Parents play the most important role in caring for the health of 
their children. Moms and dads are at the heart of their children's 
education and care, and it is crucial that they be able to make 
decisions about what kind of healthcare is best for them and about the 
timing of it and certainly that they be not only able to make the 
decision but also that they be aware of it in the first place.
  The DC legislation that I referenced a moment ago goes so far as to 
hide children's vaccinations from their own parents, even after it has 
occurred, in other words. This information is withheld from the 
parents. It requires doctors, nurses, insurance companies, and even 
public schools to conceal their children's vaccinations from their 
parents.
  It would also fly in the face of parents who may have religious 
beliefs causing them to object to vaccinations or who have made the 
decision for their children to forgo, either on a long-term basis or 
for a particular period of time, certain vaccinations--like the HPV 
vaccine, for example.
  Furthermore, it would pave the way for allowing children to consent 
to other types of medical treatment without parental knowledge down the 
road, other treatments in other contexts that might have long-lasting, 
significant impacts on their health.
  Look, as a parent myself and as someone who, as a parent, believes in 
vaccinations, I think it is imperative to realize that regardless of 
how you, in particular, feel about vaccines, even if, like me, you 
support the idea of being vaccinated and having your children 
vaccinated, remember that there are those who don't share those views, 
and remember that separate and apart from their views, there are some 
people whose family histories and personal medical experience might 
reveal some tendency toward a reaction, an idiosyncratic reaction that 
could be harmful. In some circumstances the timing of a vaccination can 
also be important. These are all considerations that a parent ought to 
be able to make, and in every jurisdiction that respects the 
independence of parental rights, these ought to be decisions that are 
made by parents and certainly ought not be decisions made by children 
as young as 11 years old without their parents' consent or even their 
knowledge.
  In light of these concerns, as in legislative session, I ask 
unanimous consent that the Committee on Homeland Security and 
Governmental Affairs be discharged from further consideration of S.J. 
Res. 7 and that the Senate proceed to its immediate consideration. I 
further ask that the joint resolution be considered read a third time 
and passed and that the motion to reconsider be considered made and 
laid upon the table.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. CARPER. Reserving the right to object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
  Mr. CARPER. Madam President, I respect the views of my colleagues. I 
respect the views of this colleague especially, and he knows that. We 
don't always agree on everything or even, maybe, most things, but I 
think it is important we be able to find ways to disagree without being 
disagreeable.
  I understand that the senior Senator from Utah is here today because 
he disagrees with a particular policy. That is certainly his right, his 
prerogative. He is welcome to register his views, as we all are.
  For instance, we have heard our friend from Utah defend the 
principles of limited government and our system of federalism on this 
floor many times. I have heard him and other colleagues of ours argue 
with passion that the Federal Government should not be in the business 
of interfering in State or local matters.
  Yet here we are, as our Republican colleagues try to tell a local 
government, once again, what it can and cannot do. The Senator from 
Utah has introduced a resolution that seeks to overturn a law passed by 
the duly elected council of the District of Columbia.
  I am not here to debate the merits of this law. After all, I was not 
elected by the people living in the District of Columbia. In fact, no 
one, as far as I know, in this room was elected by the people of the 
District of Columbia.
  But the reason that these Senators have the ability to try to 
overturn a law passed by the local DC government is that the over 
700,000 individuals who call the District of Columbia home continue to 
be denied full representation in Congress--in fact, any representation 
here in the U.S. Senate.
  Under current law, Congress reviews all legislation passed by the DC 
Council before it can become law. The District of Columbia is not 
allowed to even control its own budget. The Mayor of DC cannot even 
deploy the men and women of the National Guard in case of emergency, a 
right every other State executive can utilize. If this were the case 
for any other State or local government, there would rightfully be an 
outcry from the citizens of that State or local government.
  I don't believe that our colleague from Utah would take kindly to me 
or any of us in this body telling the city council in, say, Salt Lake 
City--a city with just under 200,000 residents--what laws they could or 
could not pass, and he would be right. He would be right. Luckily, the 
people of Salt Lake City have a Senator who has come to Washington, 
speaks his mind on the Senate floor, and votes to advance the interests 
of not just Salt Lake City citizens but the rest of Utah as well. I 
think that is really, in its essence, all that the people of 
Washington, DC, are looking for.
  For me, the issue of DC statehood is not a Democratic or Republican 
issue; it is a simple issue of basic fairness. For a Nation whose 
founding mantra--``no taxation without representation''--inspired the 
longest running experiment in democracy, we should all be concerned 
that today more than 700,000 tax-paying Americans, over two-thirds of 
whom are people of color, continue to be denied a vote here in this 
body.
  Our Nation's Capital is home to more than just monuments and museums. 
It is a home to American families who go to work, to Americans who 
start businesses, to Americans who pay their taxes, to Americans who 
serve our country in times of war and peace, and to Americans who are 
still denied representation. Again, it is home to veterans and 
servicemembers who have signed up to protect our freedoms, who have 
risked their lives for our country and are still denied the ability to 
have a say in our Nation's future. It is home to the hundreds of 
Capitol Police officers who come to work every day in the Nation's 
Capital to keep us safe and are still denied a vote in the very 
institution they protect.
  For generations, those who call the District of Columbia home have 
been denied the right to fully participate in our democracy, and that 
is why we are here today. That is why our Republican colleagues can 
call this vote to silence the decisions made by local leaders that DC 
residents have voted into office. That is why they can exercise this 
Federal overreach here today.
  I said at the beginning of my remarks that my colleagues and I don't 
always agree on everything, but we do agree on quite a bit. But I 
strongly agree and want to associate myself with the words of Senator 
Mike Lee in, I think it was 2018, just a couple of years ago. He said 
then:

       We should allow each unique community to develop unique 
     solutions according to the unique local preferences, and 
     leave it at that.

  Let me just repeat that.

       We should allow each unique community to develop unique 
     solutions according to unique local preferences, and leave it 
     at that.

  I could not agree more. I think it is incumbent upon all of us who 
care deeply for our democracy and the rights of all Americans to take 
up the cause of our fellow citizens in the District of Columbia and use 
our voices to call out this historic injustice and finally right this 
wrong.
  With that, I stand opposed to Senator Lee's joint resolution
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. CARPER. Objection.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. LEE. Madam President, I appreciate the thoughtful words of my 
friend and distinguished colleague, the Senator from Delaware. I am 
grateful anytime someone is willing to recognize

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that I have been a consistent champion of federalism and localism, 
self-rule.
  He and I agree that those principles are important. My friend from 
Delaware, being a former Governor himself, understands the sovereignty 
of the States and the need to respect their judgment.
  This is a different circumstance here than that. This would 
absolutely be inappropriate for us, in any other circumstance, to tell 
a State or any political subdivision of any State--a city, town, a 
county, any other subunit of one of our 50 sovereign States--it would 
be inappropriate for us to weigh in on a local policy issue like this. 
It is, in fact, part of our constitutional design that each State and 
each community within each State needs to be able to express itself and 
make its own decisions based on its own unique preferences.
  Here is a very significant difference with respect to the District of 
Columbia. It has its own provision of the Constitution--in fact, its 
own clause in article I, section 8, known as the enclave clause. This 
provision, found in article I, section 8, clause 17, gives Congress 
exclusive legislative jurisdiction over what we now call the District 
of Columbia. It wasn't called that in 1787, when they wrote this. It 
hadn't yet been designed, created, but it described the area to be 
created out of land donated by one or more States, no more than 10 
miles square that would serve as the seat of our national government.
  There was an understanding the Founding Fathers had that the seat of 
government ought not be under the control of any single State, but 
rather it ought to be in a special status. To that end, the Founding 
Fathers put ultimate legislative jurisdiction in the hands of Congress, 
not in that district itself, not in the hands of the States that 
donated the land to create it, but in Congress.
  Now, the DC Home Rule Act, of course, gives substantial authority to 
the DC City Council and Mayor. As it relates to this legislation, it 
gives the DC government 30 business days after the passage and 
enrollment of this legislation, and in that 30 business-day period, 
Congress has the ability to disapprove of that legislation, which would 
stop it from being implemented when it is set to take effect on March 
18.
  Let's remember what we are talking about here. We are talking about 
the most basic fundamental choice that a parent has relative to his or 
her child: the authority and the discretion to decide when, whether, 
how, and under what circumstances and what time certain medical 
procedures may be performed on the child. You might disagree with the 
medical judgment of a particular parent and at a particular moment, but 
I am not aware of any State that would make the decision on a statewide 
basis to take this choice away from parents and to say that a child as 
young as 11 years old could make his or her own choice and not only 
deprive a child's parents from being able to make that decision but 
also be able to deprive that child's parents from ever even learning 
about it. These things are sometimes not without consequence.
  Imagine, for example, a circumstance in which the parents are aware 
of some particular medical condition, a medical procedure that this 
child has recently had. Imagine circumstances in which a child's 
siblings or the child him or herself had previously reacted to a 
particular vaccination in a particular way or imagine a circumstance in 
which religious considerations come into play. Do we really want to 
deprive parents of the ability to make that decision?
  I am not aware of any State legislature that would make that choice. 
I certainly hope they wouldn't. But regardless, and even though this 
would not be our choice, this would not be within our authority if it 
were not within the District of Columbia and, therefore, within our 
plenary legislative jurisdiction under the enclave clause to make this 
decision from Congress. It is our decision here because, at the end of 
the day, the DC government itself is acting on authority delegated to 
it by the Congress.
  So whether you like it or not, whether you like, in the abstract, the 
idea of localism either as embodied in federalism or even more 
generally than that, you can't escape the fact that under our 
constitutional system, we are the lawmaker for DC, no less than any 
State's legislature is the legislative body for that State. If you 
choose not to decide here, you still have made a choice. You still have 
made a choice to approve of that legislative body stripping away 
critical protections, critical rights that parents have. We have made 
that decision not just because it sounds like the right thing to do, 
but anyone who has ever been a parent understands that it has to be the 
parent's choice. A parent has to be in a position of making these 
decisions and, at least, for crying out loud, be made aware of this. 
This takes away not only their authority or their rights but even their 
awareness of what has happened to their child.
  So, yes, I understand the concerns of localism. They simply don't 
apply here.
  Under our constitutional system, under the Constitution itself, the 
document to which we all have sworn an oath to uphold, protect, and 
defend, this is not a State decision.
  To the extent it is a decision for the DC government, for the DC City 
Council, and Mayor, that is authority that we have delegated to the 
District, and it is authority that is ultimately ours. We are 
ultimately answerable to the people, to those who have elected us, to 
make sure that is exercised responsibly.
  So if you don't like the fact that we are doing this--for that 
matter, if you don't like the policy of this, if you as a State 
lawmaker wouldn't be comfortable with this policy being adopted in your 
State--you have not only every right and every authority, but I believe 
you have a moral obligation to stand up to this piece of legislation. 
Do not let this kick in on March 18. This is wrong. It is not something 
we have to accept, and it is certainly not something that the 
Constitution even allows, much less compels.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Murphy). The Senator from West Virginia.