[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 86 (Tuesday, May 18, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2561-S2568]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




           ENDLESS FRONTIER ACT--MOTION TO PROCEED--Continued

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic whip.


                                 Taxes

  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, yesterday marked the deadline for filing 
personal income taxes in America. I am sure many people spent the past 
weekend surrounded by 1099 forms and shoe boxes full of receipts, 
hoping to claim a well-deserved tax refund after a year of financial 
stress due to the pandemic.
  That is another reason why the American Rescue Plan that Congress 
passed earlier this year was such a major accomplishment. It included, 
that plan, included the largest, single-year tax cut for middle- and 
low-income earners in the history of the Nation. Let me repeat that. 
This year's American Rescue Plan included the largest, single-year tax 
cut for middle- and low-income earners in America's history.
  But for a privileged few, those tax cuts are pennies compared to the 
deductions they enjoy every year because of Republican tax proposals, 
proposals like the Trump tax plan that Republicans signed into law in 
2017, just 4 years ago. Over the next few years, it is estimated that 
more than 80 percent of the benefits from this Trump tax plan will go 
exclusively to the top 1 percent of American earners--the top 1 
percent. It is nothing more than welfare for the wealthiest.
  Perhaps the most egregious aspect of the Trump tax plan is the 
billions of taxpayer dollars it will give to the world's wealthiest 
individuals and corporations over the next decade. We are already 
feeling the devastating impact this corporate giveaway has had on 
America's economy.
  Listen to this now, if you just turned in your taxes. Last year, 55 
of the largest companies in America paid zero--zero dollars in Federal 
taxes despite making more than $40 billion in profits. Forty billion 
dollars in profits; zero taxes. It is a glaring example of the 
imbalance in our tax system.
  I don't think there is any rational explanation for having 
schoolteachers and janitors pay more in taxes than the largest 
corporations, but it seems the folks on the other side of the aisle 
disagree.
  When Senator McConnell met with President Biden last week, he said 
that raising taxes on corporations--the same corporations that paid 
zero last year in taxes--is a ``red line'' when it comes to funding the 
President's infrastructure package. That means Senator McConnell, the 
Republican leader in the Senate, would rather cut taxes for the 
ultrawealthy than repair America's crumbling roads and bridges.
  Did you see that picture in the news? Of the bridge? I think it was 
in Tennessee, on one of the interstates. It cracked so badly, they had 
to close it, close an interstate bridge. We remember just a few years 
ago in Minnesota, an interstate highway collapsed, taking American 
lives. It can happen and will continue to happen unless we do our part. 
That is not just bad policy; it is dangerous.
  I guess this is the picture that I brought to show what was happening 
with this bridge in Tennessee. You can see the crack in the steel 
girders there and the reason they closed the bridge. God forbid some 
other bridge is in that same shape and we haven't discovered it or we 
won't discover it soon enough.
  We need to put some money in our infrastructure. We count on it every 
day. People rely on the safety of these bridges and other facilities, 
and it is our job to make sure they are kept up.
  That is not just bad policy, saying no tax increases for corporations 
if it means paying for infrastructure that way; it is dangerous.
  Take a look at what happens when we fail to adequately invest in our 
infrastructure. That photo tells it all. A ``structural crack'' they 
called it. That was found in a bridge in Memphis, TN, last week. Tens 
of thousands of vehicles drive over that bridge every day. It connects 
commuters and commercial traffic between Arkansas and Tennessee. If not 
for a scrupulous engineer who caught the crack, local authorities

[[Page S2562]]

said it would have led to a ``catastrophic'' result. Luckily, the 
catastrophe was averted.
  But now the people of Memphis and across America have a different 
problem. Repairs take time. That means the economic damage caused by 
the bridge's closure is going to last for months. And it means that 
shipping and transportation networks will have to reroute for the 
foreseeable future. So it has a national impact on the economy, one 
bridge.
  Is this what we have come to in terms of infrastructure in America? 
Are we supposed to accept bridges hanging by a thread?
  This closure happened the same week that cyber criminals shut down 
one of the largest petroleum pipelines in the United States. Did you 
see the newscast? Did you see the lines of people and their panicked 
buying? They didn't know if there would be enough gas to get to work, 
to get the kids to school, or in emergencies, so they went and filled 
their tanks, and we had a real mess on our hands. We saw the chaos that 
was created by that ransomware attack: cars lining up in every 
direction; people actually filling--and this is dangerous--plastic bags 
with gasoline.
  While it may have been a bridge in Memphis or a pipeline on the east 
coast last week, what is next?
  According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, 43 percent of 
our public roadways are in poor or mediocre condition. Maybe that just 
means potholes and banging up your car or slowing down the traffic, but 
it could be worse.
  All of these signs point to the same conclusion: We are living on 
borrowed funds from a previous generation. We are using the 
infrastructure that they paid for because we don't want to create our 
own infrastructure.
  Cutting corners is simply not an option. That is exactly where we are 
going to end up if Senator McConnell's redline becomes the standard for 
deciding if we have infrastructure. And it is predicated on a failed 
economic theory.
  The Republican approach--the so-called aptly named Laffer curve--
believes if you just cut taxes on the wealthiest people, that will take 
care of the whole economy. Everybody is going to get well if the 
wealthiest have more money. I don't buy it.
  It is time to wake up from the trickle-down fever dream. Look at 
where 50 years of cutting taxes on the extra-wealthy has brought us: 
bridges on the verge of collapse; pipelines held for ransom; the most 
unequal economy since the Gilded Age in American history.
  The economic consensus is clear: Tax cuts on the wealthy have never 
created jobs. They have never boosted economic growth. They just boost 
the banks accounts of the people who already have it. The benefits rise 
all the way to the top of the economic ladder and stay there.
  If we want to rebuild America, we need to invest in America. To do 
that, we need the wealthiest Americans and massive corporations to step 
up and pay their fair share.
  If you think you paid your fair share or more yesterday, how about 
the corporations that paid zero on $40 billion of profit?
  President Biden understands this. Tha is why he has proposed the 
American Jobs Plan. It is going to grow our economy by putting millions 
of people to work rebuilding roads and bridges, like the Hernando de 
Soto Bridge. And it would make our crucial infrastructure more 
resilient to 21st-century threats like ransomware and cyber criminals.

  President Biden also has a plan to pay for these investments, unlike 
the Trump tax plan. To start, the President's plan would raise hundreds 
of billions of dollars by holding tax cheats accountable and rolls back 
the tax breaks that encourage corporations to ship jobs overseas.
  This is something that boils my blood. Here is a corporation--and 
many of them have been located in my State--doing well, making a 
handsome profit, and expanding their business. They sit down with their 
counsel, lawyers, and come up with a brandnew idea: Well, let's just 
move our headquarters out of the United States, out of the State of 
Illinois, and put it in some foreign country. Think of how much we will 
save by not paying our fair share of taxes in the United States. We get 
all the benefits in this country. We use its infrastructure. We locate 
here. We actually live here. But we take a post office box in some 
faraway place and skip paying taxes to America.
  What a grand idea that is for some. For me, it is just deception and 
fraud.
  The only people who would see their taxes increase under President 
Biden's proposals are those making over $400,000 a year. Now, if you 
are making over that amount of money and don't want to announce it 
publicly, but you are sick and tired of Durbin's speech, get up and 
leave at this point. But if you are making under $400,000 a year, stick 
around because President Biden has made sure these tax increases will 
not affect you.
  Let me put it another way. We can fund President Biden's 
infrastructure plan without raising a single tax on actual working 
families in America. How about that? Frankly, it is about time we 
balance the scales of our tax system.
  During the pandemic, how did the richest 1 percent of Americans do? 
What was their struggle during this crisis? They saw, the 1 percent, 
saw their net worth increase by $4 trillion--not a bad year.
  If we want to get serious about creating jobs in America, everybody 
has to do their part. And this isn't just about rebuilding our country. 
It is the next century of global leadership at stake.


                                S. 1260

  Mr. President, this week, the Senate will consider the Endless 
Frontier Act, a bipartisan measure introduced by Senator Schumer, a 
Democrat, and Senator Young, a Republican. It is primarily focused on 
investing in America's leadership in scientific and technological 
innovation and making sure those investments create jobs--good-paying 
jobs--in manufacturing and emerging industries. I am sure there are 
some worthwhile amendments that should be voted on, but I think it is 
an excellent example of the legislative process at work.
  With the Endless Frontier Act, Republicans and Democrats are coming 
together to recognize that we need to invest in our capacity to compete 
with China and the rest of the world. This is one of our highest 
priorities.
  While this bill is a promising starting point, remember, it is just a 
starting point. I hope it is the beginning of a new bipartisan agenda 
for the future. We can't afford to stand still. While we might not 
agree on every solution, I am sure we share the same goal--put America 
on track to win in the 21st century.
  I have listened carefully to many of my Republican colleagues who say 
President Biden is too ambitious, wants to invest too much money, and 
has too many big ideas. These Republicans have a solid second-place 
strategy for America. I don't want to be part of that.
  This country can prosper and lead with the right inspiration. 
President Biden is bringing that to the table. That is what the 
American Jobs Plan is all about, President Biden is calling on 
everybody--everybody--to play a part in building that future.
  Let's invest in America and create millions of good-paying jobs in 
the process.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. LEE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Utah.


                    Nomination of Kristen M. Clarke

  Mr. LEE. Madam President, I rise today to oppose the nomination of 
Kristen Clarke to be the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil 
Rights Division.
  As I have said multiple times, I am not here to call into question 
Ms. Clarke's motives, nor am I here to call into question whether she 
is a good person. In fact, I am willing to assume and even concede, for 
purposes of our conversation today, that she is a good person and that 
her motives are good. It is not my job as a Member of the Senate to go 
beyond that, but I do have some very serious concerns reflected in

[[Page S2563]]

Ms. Clark's record, concerns that, regrettably, she has failed to 
rebut.
  First, given the importance of the Civil Rights Division to the 
enforcement of our Nation's anti-discrimination laws, I am concerned 
about past instances in which she has publicly pushed the Department of 
Justice to not pursue egregious instances of voter intimidation.
  Ms. Clarke criticized the Department of Justice's decision to 
prosecute Ike Brown for voter intimidation and suppression. As a 
reminder, in that case, the case involving Ike Brown, a Mississippi 
Democratic official engaged in rampant vote manipulation and absentee 
ballot fraud.
  Rather than praising the Justice Department's successful prosecution 
of the case, she criticized the decision, stating that some of the 
claims were ``weak.'' When asked point-blank whether she agreed with 
DOJ's decision to prosecute two members of the New Black Panther Party 
who, by the way, showed up to a polling place wielding a billy club, 
she demurred, saying:

       I believe the leadership of the Justice Department had the 
     prerogative to bring the cases that it deemed appropriate to 
     bring.

  Well, that is a completely nonresponsive answer. It is a little like 
saying Congress has the prerogative to pass the legislation that it 
deems appropriate to pass.
  In short, Ms. Clarke was unwilling to decry outrageous voter 
suppression and intimidation when Democrats were implicated. She showed 
no corresponding hesitancy in challenging commonsense election security 
laws, like voter identification requirements, passed by Republican 
State legislatures.
  Indeed, she has frequently challenged State election laws attempting 
to paint ballot security measures as categorically racially 
discriminatory, which raises the question: Does Ms. Clarke, in fact, 
oppose all voter intimidation or just voter intimidation against 
certain groups? When the position the nominee is applying for involves 
being the head of the Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of 
Justice--the very division that is responsible for overseeing voter 
rights laws--that is not a question that you want to have to ask.
  Second, Ms. Clarke has shown a troubling disregard toward certain 
constitutional rights. A few years ago, she decried the Trump 
administration's creation of a Religious Liberty Task Force, saying 
that the goal was ``to make it easier for people to use religion to 
mask their discriminatory goals. Shameful.''
  I would remind Ms. Clarke that the very first sentence of the Bill of 
Rights safeguards the very religious freedoms that she accuses of 
``masking discriminatory goals.''
  Again, late last year, Ms. Clarke attacked the Supreme Court's 
decision in Roman Catholic Diocese v. Cuomo, saying the Court's ruling 
wrongly privileged ``religious freedom above all else.''
  Now, by way of reference here, just to set the context straight, that 
decision in the Supreme Court's ruling in Roman Catholic Diocese v. 
Cuomo simply stated that commonsense proposition--one that is, in my 
view, unremarkable--that the government must treat mosques and 
synagogues and churches the same way that it treats liquor stores and 
acupuncture clinics
  Statements like these give religious Americans like myself pause. Why 
should we believe that she will defend the civil rights, including the 
religious rights of all Americans, not just those with whom she happens 
to agree?
  Finally, I am worried about Ms. Clarke's failure adequately to 
address her troubling history of inflammatory statements and 
irresponsible activism.
  In college, she wrote an article stating that ``Melanin endows Blacks 
with greater mental, physical, and spiritual abilities--something which 
cannot be measured based on Eurocentric standards.''
  Not surprisingly, she was asked about this at the Senate Judiciary 
Committee hearing. And when she was asked about it at her hearing, she 
claimed this statement was meant to be satirical. But at no point--not 
during the hearing, not in connection with followup questions for the 
record--did Ms. Clarke ever acknowledge the obvious; that these 
statements were unacceptable, regardless of whether she intended them 
to be satirical.
  Likewise, rather than express regret for her decision to participate 
and assist in a conference defending cop killers and domestic 
terrorists in law school, she merely said that she ``provided 
logistical support.'' That contradicts the statements made by numerous 
speakers at the conference who personally thanked her for her efforts.
  In preparation for that same conference, Ms. Clarke recommended that 
an article entitled ``Mumia, `Lynch Law,' and Imperialism'' be included 
in the conference newspaper and discussed in connection with one of the 
panels.
  That article contains some of the most inflammatory anti-police 
rhetoric I have ever seen. Here is a quote from it, an actual quote: 
``The Klan is now the Police, with Blue uniforms replacing the sheets 
and hoods. The corrupt racist Judges, are petty Klan administrators.''
  When asked about her promotion of this article in her questions for 
the record before the Judiciary Committee, Ms. Clarke stated that she 
``ha[d] no independent recollection of that email.''
  Now, once again, we have here a complete nonanswer. Ms. Clarke 
declined to explain, much less take responsibility for, associating 
herself with extraordinarily, obscenely dangerous rhetoric.
  Moreover, if Ms. Clarke were to be confirmed, she would be 
responsible for overseeing pattern and practice investigations of law 
enforcement agencies, which makes her unexplained, inexcusable 
involvement with anti-law enforcement activities all the more 
troubling.
  I would also point out that the article's author, Amiri Baraka, was--
like Professor Martin mentioned a moment ago--famously anti-Semitic. On 
one occasion, he wrote, in reference to Jews, that he had ``the 
extermination blues.'' So, again, we have Ms. Clarke casually 
associating herself with a virulently anti-Semitic thinker.
  Ms. Clarke also denied on the record that she had served on the 
editorial staff of a college journal with Amiri Baraka. But a simple 
Google search of ``Kristen Clarke'' and ``Amiri Baraka'' shows that 
when she was an assistant editor of that journal, Amiri Baraka was a 
contributing editor. Her denial of this easily verifiable fact is hard 
to understand.
  Now, let's be perfectly clear. I don't bring any of this up to 
suggest that all of it is unforgivable. Look, everyone has, from time 
to time, said or done things that they later come to regret, but let's 
keep in mind what we are looking at here. Ms. Clarke, herself, is 
asking us to apply a very different standard to her than we have 
applied to others--a different standard, in many ways, than she has 
asked be applied to others.
  In 2019, her name appeared on a letter sent by the Leadership 
Conference on Civil and Human Rights, where she sat on the board of 
directors of that organization, opposing the nomination of a lawyer 
named Ryan Bounds, who had been nominated to serve on the U.S. Court of 
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. That letter stated that, ``[w]hile 
[Bounds] recently apologized for those comments''--comments that had 
come up in connection with his confirmation proceedings--``the timing 
of that apology suggests it is one of convenience rather than remorse, 
offered in a last-ditch effort to salvage his nomination.''
  In her hearing testimony, Ms. Clarke provided no explanation for why 
we should overlook her extraordinarily controversial activities and 
statements while she was a student. Rather, she attempted to minimize 
or, in some cases, even evade her actions.
  Ms. Clarke's history of irresponsible actions and words didn't end 
with law school. In 2019, she signed a letter defending Tamika Mallory, 
a woman who stated that ``white Jews'' ``uphold white supremacy'' and 
associated herself with Louis Farrakhan.
  When pressed on this point, she gave no explanation for her statement 
of support, other than saying that the letter ``denounce[d] . . . 
antisemitism.''
  Now, I am confused. How can a letter defending a woman accused of 
making anti-Semitic statements actually be a letter that is denouncing 
anti-Semitism? Either anti-Semitism is bad or it is not. You can't have 
your cake and eat it too. The way I read that letter, I don't see the 
letter as saying, yes,

[[Page S2564]]

that statement was bad, but there are other circumstances that should 
be considered. Instead, I see a wholehearted defense of the individual 
herself.
  Likewise, just last year, Ms. Clarke wrote an article titled ``I 
Prosecuted Police Killings, Defund the Police--But Be Strategic.''
  When pressed about this by my colleagues on the Judiciary Committee, 
Ms. Clarke, once again, sought to evade responsibility, saying that she 
has ``developed a practice of being deferential to editors on title 
selection.'' But I don't think that is how this works. The article 
does, in fact, have her name on it. Even if she were deferential, the 
fact that she is describing herself as deferential here suggests that 
she did, in fact, make a conscious decision to defer. She didn't say: I 
had absolutely no choice in it. I didn't see the title. She just said 
that she adopted a practice of being deferential.
  In any event, you can hardly blame the editor for the title that he 
or she chose. Ms. Clarke wrote three times in that piece--three times--
``We must invest less in police.''
  In short, Ms. Clarke's record reflects a consistent pattern of 
inflammatory statements and actions, followed by a disclaimer of 
responsibility and a lack of candor and remorse. Moreover, her record 
gives us reason to doubt that she will defend the civil rights of all 
Americans, not just her political allies.
  For these reasons, I regretfully cannot support her nomination.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, very shortly, we will be voting on the 
Kristen Clarke nomination to the Department of Justice. This week is an 
apt time to start the discussion about her nomination because it marks 
the anniversary of two of the most important Supreme Court decisions in 
the history of America. The first is the infamous Plessy v. Ferguson 
decision in 1896, wherein the Supreme Court established a standard of 
separate but equal. That was the standard that was used to justify--
legally justify--racial discrimination throughout America. Sixty years 
later, in the landmark decision of Brown v. Board of Education, the 
Supreme Court unanimously--unanimously--rejected that shameful document 
and blazed a trail for the modern civil rights movement.
  This year, 2021, the Senate has a chance to continue America's long 
march toward equality and racial justice by confirming principled, 
experienced leaders to the Department of Justice. The Senate should 
work expeditiously to consider and confirm these nominees. We have 
already confirmed Attorney General Merrick Garland, Deputy Attorney 
General Lisa Monaco, and Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta. The 
next one in the order of the administration's priority on hiring in the 
Department of Justice is Kristen Clarke. President Biden has nominated 
her to lead the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division.
  Ms. Clarke is the right person to restore credibility to the Civil 
Rights Division. Under the previous President, the former Attorneys 
General Sessions and Barr, that Division was warped into a target and a 
tool to discriminate against marginalized Americans. During that 
previous administration, the Division rescinded guidance that 
strengthened protections for transgender students. They prohibited the 
use of consent decrees with local police departments that engaged in 
systemic misconduct. And they abandoned the longstanding principle of 
defending Americans' right to vote. Now we have an opportunity for a 
course correction in the Civil Rights Division by confirming a proven 
civil rights leader to head that Division.
  As a former trial attorney in the Division's Voting Section and as a 
prosecutor in its Criminal Section, Ms. Clarke has clearly played in 
the big leagues. She personally understands the role that the 
Division's line attorneys play on a day-to-day basis. Ms. Clarke knows 
that these career attorneys must be independent from political pressure 
in order to carry out the mission to defend the civil rights of all 
Americans, and her diverse background as a legal expert will serve her 
well.
  As the former codirector of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational 
Fund's voting rights group, Clarke confronted assaults on voting rights 
and ballot access, like those we are seeing in State legislatures 
across America today. As the former chief of the New York Attorney 
General's Civil Rights Bureau, she helped establish the Office of 
Religious Rights Initiative, defending the First Amendment rights of 
workers throughout the State.
  You would find it hard to believe about Ms. Clarke and the issue of 
freedom of religion, based on some of the earlier statements made on 
the floor, and to then learn that she established the office's 
Religious Rights Initiative in New York. Today, as the president and 
executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under 
Law, Ms. Clarke has spearheaded new initiatives to address civil rights 
issues created by new technologies.
  She is singularly qualified to head the Civil Rights Division at this 
moment. She brings with her a wealth of expertise and experience needed 
to lead this Division at this moment in history.
  She also boasts broad, enthusiastic support from the law enforcement 
community. If you were on the floor and heard the statement previously 
made by the senior Senator from Utah, you would find it hard to believe 
that law enforcement would support this woman. Some of the things they 
say about her in criticizing her record suggest that those in the law 
enforcement community are her natural enemies. The opposite is true.
  Throughout her decades of civil rights work--20 years of working in 
civil rights that included several years as a prosecutor--she has 
partnered closely with law enforcement. Many of them have publicly 
endorsed her, and I will get to that in a moment. Yet, if you were to 
listen to the arguments from the other side of the aisle--and we heard 
them in committee--you would think this amazing woman must be so gifted 
that she can engage in the practice of law for 20 years in the same 
theater, including with law enforcement leaders from all over America, 
and somehow they never caught on to the fact, according to them, that 
she was virulently against law enforcement. In fact, they came out and 
said the opposite. She was fair. She was objective. She was a good 
partner in trying to resolve difficult issues.
  They would have us believe that she has this mystical power to take 
people in law enforcement and delude them because secretly she is a 
radical, a Socialist radical. Not true. The partnership she has had 
with law enforcement began when she prosecuted hate crimes in the Civil 
Rights Division, and it continues to this day through her work on the 
Lawyers' Committee James Byrd Jr. Center to Stop Hate. This center 
provides community resources, training, and support for law enforcement 
to better identify, investigate, prosecute, and report hate crimes.
  In each of these roles throughout her history as a professional 
prosecutor at the highest levels in the United States of America, Ms. 
Clarke has earned the respect and trust of members of law enforcement, 
reflected in their strong support for her nomination.
  Listen to some of the groups that openly support her and then reflect 
on some of the charges that were just made against her on the floor by 
the Senator from Utah.
  She has support from the Major Cities Police Chiefs Association. She 
has the support of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement 
Executives. She has the support of Women in Federal Law Enforcement; 
the Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association; over 40 
prominent police chiefs and sheriffs; and Sheriff David Mahoney, who 
just this month stepped down as president of the National Sheriffs' 
Association.
  Ms. Clarke's critics would come to the floor and have you believe she 
has deluded all of them. She has deceived all of them. Despite the work 
they have done with her, she secretly can't stand them.
  Well, it is not true. And it is not true, and they know it. I think 
the Senators on the other side of the aisle should know it as well.

[[Page S2565]]

  Ms. Clarke has the support of a bipartisan group of former Justice 
Department officials who wrote to the committee and said: ``Ms. 
Clarke's experience, in addition to her high character, make her a 
superior choice to lead'' the Civil Rights Division. People who worked 
with her have endorsed her for promotion.
  Although Ms. Clarke's record demonstrates that she has devoted her 
life to advancing the civil rights of all Americans, in recent weeks, 
she has been the target of an incredible amount of baseless, vitriolic 
attacks.
  I don't understand what is going on around here sometimes when I look 
at these nominations and wonder how people like her--Kristen Clarke, 
Vanita Gupta, and others--really enrage people on the other side of the 
aisle, to the point where organizations are making concerted efforts to 
really twist and distort their life's work, their values, and the 
talents that they bring.
  Listen to one of these attacks that was just made again on the floor 
of the Senate. The attack is that she personally defended Mumia Abu-
Jamal, who was convicted in 1982 of the murder of a Philadelphia police 
officer named David Faulkner.
  The attack is missing one key point. Ms. Clarke never--never--worked 
on the Abu-Jamal case. You wouldn't know that from the charges made.
  But perhaps the most vicious attack against her is the false 
accusation of anti-Semitism.
  Now, I am not Jewish, and the Senator who suggested that she was 
anti-Semitic in some of the things that she had said and done is not 
Jewish either, but those who are of the Jewish faith have considered 
the charges made against her. Let me tell you what they found.
  They found these accusations couldn't be further from the truth. Ms. 
Clarke has spent much of her career defending the rights of Jewish 
Americans.
  At the New York State attorney general's office, she repeatedly 
defended Jewish employees' right to observe the Sabbath in the 
workplace.
  Does that sound like someone who is negative on the issue of freedom 
of religion or anti-Semitic?
  She has also been at the forefront of confronting the growth of anti-
Semitic hate and harassment online through her work with the Lawyers' 
Committee. For instance, she helped shut down a virulent White 
Supremacist and anti-Semitic website called Stormfront.
  Several Jewish groups have emphatically denounced the baseless 
attacks, which continue to be made, even to this day, against this 
woman.
  Notably, the Union for Reform Judaism, the Nation's largest Jewish 
denomination, wrote to the Judiciary Committee to voice unwavering 
support for Ms. Clarke's nomination.
  Let me tell you what they said. ``We've heard the voices who have 
hurled accusations of antisemitism at Ms. Clarke, and we reject them. 
They do not comport with the career and record of the colleague we have 
worked with throughout her career.''
  These attempts to smear Ms. Clarke's record are a last-ditch effort 
to discredit a nominee with exemplary qualifications.
  The bottom line is this: Ms. Clarke is the right person to lead the 
Civil Rights Division. It is a difficult assignment. At any time in our 
history, it is difficult, probably more so today than ever. She is the 
person for the job.
  At this moment in history, our country needs her combination of 
expertise, experience, skills, and thoughtfulness to ensure the Civil 
Rights Division will again work for all Americans.
  If she is confirmed to be part of Merrick Garland's team at the 
Department of Justice, Ms. Clarke would certainly make history, being 
the first Black woman confirmed by the Senate to lead the Justice 
Department's Civil Rights Division--the first.
  I look forward to supporting her nomination on the floor, as we 
continue this process, and I urge all of my colleagues to vote to 
discharge her nomination from committee and ultimately confirm her to 
this critical position at the Justice Department.
  My assignment on the Senate Judiciary Committee is a challenging one. 
The committee is evenly divided 11 to 11. There are some of the 
fiercest and strongest partisans from the other side of the aisle as 
part of this committee structure.
  I marvel sometimes at things that are said in the committee. When I 
look at the evidence--certainly when it comes to Ms. Clarke, her actual 
life, her career, her experience, and what she has done--it belies some 
of the baseless criticism that is made.
  I just wonder, What is it about this woman that drives some Members 
into a rage? I have met her. I have heard her questioned in the 
committee. I believe she has proven throughout her life that she is the 
right person to move up into this critical position at this moment in 
history.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana


                               Louisiana

  Mr. CASSIDY. Madam President, I rise today to bring attention to an 
ongoing situation in South Louisiana.
  Heavy rains are hammering our communities. A state of emergency 
exists across the area, with more rain expected today.
  It has been a difficult 2 years, pandemic aside. Eight months ago, 
Lake Charles was devastated by Hurricanes Delta and Laura, one of the 
few times in history in which a hurricane followed upon a hurricane, 
almost identically tracking.
  Yesterday, areas got anywhere from 8 to 15 inches of rain in 12 
hours. It was heartbreaking to see Lake Charles hit again by natural 
disaster.
  And this is 18 to 15 inches in 12 hours, and there you can see the 
impact of cars flooded up almost to their window. There is a home in 
the background, and you can see where the water level is relative to 
that home.
  And here we have another example of vehicles flooded, to give you an 
idea of how much rain occurred in a short period of time.
  Now, other floods and disasters in parts of the country--often floods 
and disasters in parts of the country, other than the west and the east 
coasts, get overlooked. I am here to make the case to not overlook. We 
cannot ignore the pain and destruction left in the wake of these 
storms.
  Overnight, 80 people were rescued from flash flooding in Lake 
Charles. On top of the rain and submerged roads, there were warnings 
for possible tornadoes, prompting shelter-in-place precautions.
  I heard from constituents that students were kept in schools until 
late into the night.
  Now, it is not just Lake Charles; Baton Rouge flooded as well. In 
Baton Rouge, more than 250 people were rescued after the city got a 
deluge of over 13 inches of rain on Monday night.
  And this is Baton Rouge--not as bad as Lake Charles in that picture, 
but even more people had to be rescued.
  This morning, at least 15,000 homes and businesses were without power 
in East Baton Rouge Parish.
  The number of homes and businesses flooded in Lake Charles and Baton 
Rouge combined is not known, but I can promise we will continue to hear 
distressing and saddening stories about the loss of both life and 
property throughout South Louisiana in the coming days.
  Now, through firsthand accounts, social media posts, and local news 
coverage, we have already heard emotional stories. In Lake Charles, a 
resident and their newborn had to swim to safety as water levels rose. 
In Baton Rouge, a body was found submerged in a vehicle that had gone 
into a canal.
  Water rescues and emergency evacuations have been underway for the 
last 24 hours, but Americans are at our best when we help those in 
need, and folks in Louisiana are resilient.
  So I give thanks to all the brave men and women of local fire and 
police departments for their work in saving lives. We will get through 
this together.
  When I was in Lake Charles after the last hurricane, Hurricane Delta, 
I picked up a bracelet that read ``Lake Charles Strong.'' We are Lake 
Charles Strong; we are Baton Rouge Strong; we are Louisiana Strong.
  While some outside of our State have already forgotten about the 
natural disasters of 2020, Louisiana has not. Many have yet to return 
to their homes.
  Just 2 weeks ago, President Biden visited Lake Charles, talking about 
infrastructure in front of the Calcasieu

[[Page S2566]]

River Bridge. Well, when I met him, I raised the issue of a disaster 
relief package.
  Our State was hit by hurricanes and winter storms, as well as the 
pandemic. A record five main storms made landfall last year in my 
State. The strongest was Laura, a category 4 hurricane, hitting Lake 
Charles, followed by Hurricane Delta, a category 2, just a month later.
  Louisiana farmers were also hit with catastrophic damage to 
livestock, crops, and structures during unprecedented winter storms.
  We need a disaster supplemental legislation to help communities 
struggling to recover. We cannot afford to allow the impact of an 
entire year's worth of natural disasters to go unaddressed.
  Our best line of defense for these natural disasters is coastal 
resiliency, which in our State is funded through what is called GOMESA. 
That is revenue from offshore oil and gas development.
  And folks wonder why I fight so hard to preserve that funding for 
GOMESA. GOMESA allows Louisiana to rebuild our coastline so if there is 
a hurricane coming onshore, there is the resiliency from a coastline 
which is built out with wetlands to absorb the strength of that 
hurricane.
  We need to preserve GOMESA to continue having dollars flow not just 
to Louisiana but to other Gulf Coast States to protect against natural 
disasters.
  It will be raining today and maybe longer, but to those--oh, one more 
thing to mention.
  There is a portion of the President's--a portion of the President's 
infrastructure bill which has not attracted a lot of notice but which I 
would agree with. It is called nature resilience--using the natural 
structures of our coastlines in order to increase resiliency against 
water events and other events.
  And in a spirit of bipartisanship, but once seeing the necessity of 
it, I would support that provision as I now understand it.
  So for all those in South Louisiana, please stay safe, listen to 
local officials for further instructions.
  I will continue to monitor the situation and help, as possible, with 
recovery efforts. My office is in contact with the White House, 
ensuring the full support of the Federal Government is there to help 
now and then to help recovery.
  Our prayers are with those experiencing flooding and other hardships. 
We thank the American people for their support.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Murphy). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                           Economic Recovery

  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I am here on the floor this afternoon to 
talk about the economy, how to get it on the right track and 
particularly how to deal with the jobs crisis we face right now. It is 
a different kind of crisis than we normally talk about. There are a lot 
of jobs open, and the workers who are needed are not coming forward. 
Washington needs to change direction to get the economy on the right 
track.
  Current law provides that at least until Labor Day--that is in 
September of this year--there will be a Federal supplemental payment of 
$300 per week added to the State unemployment benefit. So if somebody 
is on unemployment insurance, they will get their normal State benefit, 
which in Ohio is about half of whatever your income was, but on top of 
that, now there is a $300 Federal supplement. It was put in place 
during COVID-19, but it continues until at least September.
  By doing so, adding that $300, it nearly doubles the unemployment 
insurance benefit, on average. It also results in about 42 percent of 
those people who are on unemployment insurance making more on UI than 
they were making at work. It has the effect of, in most States, more 
than doubling the amount of unemployment insurance, and it also doubles 
the minimum wage. So you can imagine why this is a disincentive for 
some people to go back to work, if they can make more not working.
  On top of that, Democrats here in Congress, during the COVID 
legislation, added another benefit to people on unemployment insurance 
compared to people who are working, and that is to say that your first 
$10,000 of unemployment insurance is tax-free. So if you are a 
truckdriver making 35,000, 40,000 bucks a year, you don't get that tax 
benefit, but if you are on unemployment insurance, you do get that 
benefit--again, another disincentive to go back to work.
  People are logical. If the government is going to pay you more not to 
work than to work, it creates a problem. And you can see that problem. 
We have a record number of job openings right now; 8.1 million jobs are 
open in America today.
  The economic recovery we all are looking forward to is being hampered 
by what? A lack of workers. If you go down your Main Street wherever 
you live, you will see the ``help wanted'' signs up. If you go by your 
restaurants, you will see, instead of the marquees saying ``Come and 
check out our great apple pie or our hamburgers,'' they say ``We are 
paying signing bonuses''--$500, $250. I went by a Frisch's Big Boy on 
the way to the airport on Monday, and that is what I saw--McDonald's 
offering a $500 bonus.
  There are manufacturers I know in the State of Ohio I represent 
offering much more in terms of signing bonuses. I talked to a woman 
last week, who is a friend of mine, who runs a manufacturing company, a 
great little company, which has about 200, 250 employees. She is 
looking for 60 people right now. She is offering a $1,000 signing bonus 
plus other incentives, benefits, to be able to come to work, and she 
can't get people to show up to apply for work. So this is a real 
problem in terms of our interest in getting this economic recovery 
going.
  It is time to stop this extraordinary Federal unemployment 
supplement. By keeping in place this $300 per week on top of this UI 
benefit and not taxing that benefit, President Biden and my colleagues 
on the other side of the aisle are putting us in a tough position and, 
I think, on the verge of a real jobs crisis because some of these jobs 
will end up going away, some permanently, if we don't do something 
about it.
  I believe the Federal unemployment insurance was necessary, the 
Federal supplement, when we were at the heat of the COVID-19 crisis--
let's say a year ago now. People were losing their jobs through no 
fault of their own. Their businesses were shutting down, in part 
because the government was putting in place social distancing 
guidelines or otherwise saying that businesses had to temporarily 
close. A lot of people lost their jobs.
  In my view, Congress rightly put in place expanded unemployment 
benefits to help those families get by when the economy was largely 
shut down, but we are in an entirely different place now, entirely 
different place. Again, 8.1 million jobs are open right now. It is a 
historic time. We have never had this many jobs open in America.
  Thanks to the hard work of a lot of our researchers and scientists, 
this vaccine has gotten out there at record pace. We now have had 
vaccinations at levels that we had all hoped for earlier. As a result, 
with more than half of Americans already having had one vaccination--in 
my State of Ohio, it is even better than that--restrictions are easing, 
and businesses are opening up, fully open again. In my home State of 
Ohio, there is no longer a mask mandate. Here in the U.S. Senate is an 
example. Things are opening up. With that reopening, again, comes all 
these job openings that can't be filled.
  The economic recovery you would expect right now is not happening 
because people are not getting back to work.
  We just had the jobs numbers from last month. The country added 
266,000 jobs in April. This was alarming because it was only one-
quarter of what the economists predicted, only 25 percent of what 
people predicted. It is an early warning sign that should not be 
ignored.
  These disappointing monthly job reports typically tell bad news on 
two fronts. One is that there haven't been as many new jobs added as 
you would want, and that is certainly true.
  But second, it says there are not enough available jobs out there. 
There

[[Page S2567]]

aren't enough open jobs out there. That is not the problem now. 
Adequate number of jobs is not the problem. The jobs are available. But 
if the President and Congress don't change course, that could become a 
problem. If steps aren't taken to dismantle some of the disincentives 
to work, some of these record number of available jobs we talked about 
are going to go away.
  Let me give an example. There is a restaurant called Geordie's in 
Columbus, OH. They have closed down. Geordie's is closed down. They 
can't find workers. That is the reason. The owner was quoted as saying 
something like: You know, COVID-19 didn't take me down. He got the PPP 
loan. He kept going, and he struggled through, and he was staying open. 
He said: My own government has taken me down, because he can't compete 
with unemployment insurance at that level.
  We have lots of other businesses in Ohio. Here are some. Your Pizza 
Shop, Muddy's, Donatos--all in Wooster, OH--have told me that they are 
closing down 1 day a week or more because they are understaffed. Facing 
no alternative, other businesses are figuring out ways to permanently 
move forward with fewer employees.
  This concerns me. In some cases, they tell me they are just 
downsizing their business. If you can't find those 60 employees and you 
are the manufacturer right now, what do you do? You are restricting 
your business. You are not opening new markets, and you are closing 
down maybe even some existing customers because you can't serve them. 
So these jobs are going. Others are figuring out ways to do it with 
fewer people. Again, some might say that is a good thing--using 
technology and using automation to displace workers. I don't think it 
is a good thing. I would rather have more people working. That is what 
they want, too, but they can't afford it, so they are going to more 
automation, they tell me, going to anything they can do to do it with 
fewer workers.
  This is a problem, and again, Washington is creating this problem. 
Why would we do that? Again, I understood it and supported it when we 
had the COVID-19 crisis. People were losing their jobs through no fault 
of their own. But the opposite is happening now.
  We have to change gears. We are at a crossroads. We can continue to 
have this economy stagnate, continue to hurt working families, or we 
can get people back to work and create robust and sustained economic 
growth.
  I would take the $300 a week, by the way, and shift it to a 6-week 
temporary bonus of $100 a week to go to work, a work bonus. You could 
do that immediately even while keeping the $300 in place for a short 
period of time because, right away, you could help people to get back 
to work. It would happen.
  By the way, some States have decided on their own just to get rid of 
the $300 because they know it is not working for the small businesses; 
it is not working for the economy; it is not working for individuals 
who are not getting back to their career track, who are losing training 
and losing the ability to keep up with what is going on at work because 
they are, again, given this disincentive to go back.
  It is working. There was a hotel, I am told, in the first State that 
decided to do this, which was Montana--did it about 2 weeks ago--a 
hotel where they were offering every week to hire more employees. They 
were looking for more employees. They were getting 1 person a week to 
show up; last week, 60 people--60 people--because they are not offering 
the $300 anymore. They are giving the money back.
  The Biden administration, as you know, would like to spend a lot more 
money on a lot of different things--that totals about $6 trillion when 
you add it all up--to prime the pump, more stimulus, get the country 
back to work, as they say.
  What has happened is, a lot of this stimulus money, particularly in 
the $1.9 trillion COVID package, has overheated the economy--and you 
can see it in the higher inflation numbers--which is what a lot of 
people predicted, including Democratic economists and former Secretary 
of Treasury Larry Summers. A lot of us on the Republican side were 
concerned about this. Well, it is happening. And we are seeing more and 
more proposals for more and more stimulus. Inflation is not what we 
need.
  By the way, that spending of $6 trillion is about six times what the 
government spent during the New Deal in the 1930s, and that is 
inflation-adjusted. I mean, this is a lot of money.
  Instead, what we ought to do is help get people back to work and 
encourage them and let this economy grow on its own, which it is going 
to do. During the COVID-19 discussion, the Congressional Budget 
Office--a nonpartisan group here in Washington and Congress--told us 
that the economy is going to recover to its pre-COVID level by midyear 
if we do nothing, no more stimulus. Yet people insisted on more and 
more stimulus, and we can see what is happening.
  Part of that stimulus, part of that spending, was this $300 until 
Labor Day, $300 week per week in expanded unemployment benefits from 
the Federal Government, on top of the fact that you don't get taxed on 
your first $10,000. Again, that $300 is on top of whatever the State 
benefit is.
  Are there other factors that are leading to this labor problem we 
have now in our country? I think there are. I think there are. One is 
that we have a situation now where some people just can't afford 
childcare. So they are not only getting more money on unemployment, 
perhaps, than they are getting at work; if they go to work, they have 
to pay for childcare. And childcare is too expensive, and I would like 
to work on that.
  One of the reasons, we are hearing, is that schools are not open, so 
they have to use childcare because their kids are not in school. With 
only 54 percent of K-8 schools actually being open today--that is the 
latest number we have--that is a real problem. Again, that is one we 
can solve. The CDC is playing a role in that by saying: Get the kids 
back to school. They can do so safely. There certainly should not be 
any reason for this now, given the fact that so many people have been 
vaccinated and, thank goodness, the infection levels are going down so 
much.
  So I know that is an issue. Childcare is an issue.
  The other issue, I think, that we have to know is that some people 
are concerned about still getting infected at work and what the virus 
might, you know, lead to in terms of an unsafe workplace. But I will 
tell you, that concern is a lot less now. Again, so many people have 
been vaccinated, and the CDC again has responded to that and said: You 
can have a safe workplace. You can have a safe school. It is not hard 
to do.
  So let's get back to work, and particularly, let's deal with this 
unemployment insurance issue because that is the main reason people are 
not returning to work, I am told by the employers out there With more 
than 40 percent of workers making more with unemployment insurance and 
that supplement than they would in their jobs, businesses just can't 
compete.

  Think how tragic this is. A small business owner works tirelessly to 
keep the lights on through COVID-19--again, maybe uses the PPP or 
otherwise and stays in business--and finally, after more than a year, 
reaches a point where the virus is in retreat--we are doing all the 
things we should be doing to make our workplaces safe--and now they 
might have to close because they just can't find people to work.
  The same story is being told all over the country and certainly all 
over my State. Again, this is why 21 States now, as of this afternoon, 
including my home State of Ohio, have decided to give the $300 back. 
But we shouldn't, here in Washington, continue to provide that $300 to 
everybody else.
  Governors in these States understand that encouraging workers to 
return to the job market is essential to the economy, but it is also 
good for the workforce to get back to work, get back to what happens 
when you go to work, which is you have that sense of fulfillment, that 
dignity and self-respect that come with work, and you are keeping up 
with whatever the technological changes at work are and getting back on 
your career track.
  Guidance from the Biden administration, the CDC, says we can move 
forward with getting back to normal. It is time for President Biden to 
follow that advice and to end the disincentive to work that is holding 
back the economic recovery.
  These are simple steps we can take. Again, I would do a $100 bonus to 
go

[[Page S2568]]

back to work for 6 weeks. But the most important thing is to end the 
$300 and to let people once again have the opportunity to pursue their 
American dream, which is not unemployment; it is getting a job. With 
8.1 million jobs being offered--a historic number, the most ever--it is 
time to make that change.
  I urge my colleagues and I urge the administration to change course.
  I yield back my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.


                    Nomination of Kristen M. Clarke

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I will not be voting to discharge the 
nominee Kristen Clarke to run the Civil Rights Division of the 
Department of Justice, so I come to the floor to explain to my 
colleagues why I feel this way.
  While Ms. Clarke may be a very good attorney--in fact, I don't think 
there is any doubt that she is--she continues the trend of politicized 
nominees to the Justice Department under this President. While I 
disagree with her strongly on some of her views, especially when it 
comes to defunding the police, my issues with Ms. Clarke go beyond 
that.
  The Justice Department and especially the Civil Rights Division need 
to be committed to impartial and equal justice. In the wrong hands, the 
Civil Rights Division can be used to target and harass the President's 
political opponents. It can threaten law enforcement, school choice 
advocates, religious schools, red States, and pro-lifers.
  This isn't a hypothetical. Under Ms. Gupta, the Civil Rights Division 
defended an effort to take over Louisiana's school choice program. Now, 
can you imagine that? Luckily, a group of African-American mothers 
stopped them in the Fifth Circuit. Just think--African Americans 
stopped an obvious injustice by the Justice Department.
  The fact is that our civil rights laws are broad, and the mere threat 
of their enforcement can chill legitimate political opposition. Because 
of that, I think that the head of the Civil Rights Division needs to be 
above reproach when it comes to partisanship.
  Unfortunately, Ms. Clarke is a liberal partisan. She has opposed the 
enforcement of the law against Ike Brown, a Mississippi voter 
suppressor, either because of the color of his skin or because he was a 
Democrat. Neither answer is acceptable. She has disparaged religious 
freedom groups like the Alliance Defending Freedom. She has opposed 
important Supreme Court decisions protecting religious liberty, 
individual Supreme Court Justices, and even some of my colleagues. She 
has held Republican nominees to a standard she didn't want to apply to 
herself.
  Ms. Clarke has run away from her record. I asked her at the hearing 
whether Mumia Abu-Jamal, the country's most notorious cop killer, was a 
political prisoner, like someone said at a conference that she helped 
organize. She wouldn't answer, telling me she was unfamiliar with the 
case. Given her youthful activism, I find that very hard to believe. 
Last summer, she wrote an article in Newsweek advocating for defunding 
the police, but she insists the words on the page aren't what she 
meant. I am sorry, but if it is not what she meant, then she shouldn't 
have said it.
  I don't think she is the right person for this job at this time. A 
nominee to lead the Civil Rights Division should be nonpartisan, should 
be independent, and should be upfront about her beliefs. Unfortunately, 
I think Ms. Clarke misses all three marks.
  As I have said, I don't want to return to the Eric Holder days, so I 
will vote no.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Markey). The majority leader.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Good afternoon.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Good afternoon.
  Mr. SCHUMER. I am adding a little stability and friendship to these 
august proceedings, I hope you realize.


                             Vote on Motion

  Mr. President, I know of no further debate on the motion.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. If there is no further debate, the question is 
on agreeing to the motion to proceed.
  The motion was agreed to.

                          ____________________