[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 148 (Wednesday, September 14, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4585-S4586]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                                Abortion

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, yesterday, was truly a tale of two 
parties. While one party--the Democrats--gathered at the White House to 
celebrate the passage of our job-creating agenda, the other party--the 
MAGA Republicans--spent their day introducing a nationwide ban on 
abortions.
  If the American people want to know what the difference is between 
the two parties, look no further. One party is focused on jobs--that is 
us; the other is focused on nationwide abortion bans--that is the 
extreme MAGA Republicans.
  One party wants to lower inflation and help families make ends meet, 
to tackle the generational challenges we face and has passed major 
legislation to that effect, now law. The other party, apparently, wants 
to eliminate women's autonomy over their own bodies.
  Here is how you know Republicans are dangerously out of touch. Months 
after women had their freedom of choice taken away by the MAGA Supreme 
Court, a nationwide abortion ban was actually their attempt to seem 
more mainstream. Can you believe it? To seem more mainstream? Heaven 
help us. Heaven help us. It shows just how extreme they are.
  The core problem is that far from being mainstream, a large portion 
of the Republican Party harbors truly extreme views on a woman's right 
to choose. In the few months since the Dobbs decision, Republican State 
legislatures in places like Indiana, South Carolina, and others have 
either introduced or enacted new abortion restrictions, with alarmingly 
few exceptions of rape or incest.
  In this Chamber, Senate Republicans spent years confirming judges 
hostile to freedom of choice, including three sitting Supreme Court 
Justices who joined with the majority in overturning Roe. And the then-
majority leader, now minority leader, Leader McConnell, has repeatedly 
said his greatest accomplishment is putting these judges on the Court. 
His greatest accomplishment is putting judges on the Court who 
overturned Roe v. Wade. Do the American people want that? I don't think 
so.
  And for all the hemming and hawing we heard yesterday from 
Republicans about where they really stand on the issue, they cannot run 
away from their

[[Page S4586]]

record. Setting aside yesterday's proposal, the fact is that 45 Senate 
Republicans--including Leader McConnell--remain cosponsors of another 
nationwide abortion ban previously introduced by the Senator from South 
Carolina.
  Leader McConnell himself told USA Today earlier this year that 
without Roe, proposals for a nationwide ban on abortions were now 
``possible,''--his words--``possible'' if Republicans controlled the 
Senate. Do the American people want that? Do they want McConnell, 
Leader Mitch McConnell, to be majority leader and work to impose a 
nationwide ban on abortions? I don't think so.
  Now, they are sort of running away from what their real beliefs are, 
but they are like the dog who caught the bus. For years they pushed to 
make this happen, unfortunately, to the detriment of over 100 million 
American women. It happened, and now they don't know quite what to do.
  They are not backing off their horrible MAGA principles, but they 
want to hide from it at the same time because they know how unpopular 
it is.
  And to show you just where the party is at, almost immediately after 
the Court overturned Roe, Mike Pence, former Republican Vice President, 
now running for President possibly in 2024 said Republicans ``must not 
rest'' until abortion is illegal everywhere. That means a nationwide 
ban. That doesn't leave it up to the States.
  In fact, he doubled down on just this last night, saying a national 
abortion ban ``is profoundly more important'' than Republicans' short-
term interests. That is one of the leaders of the Republican Party, 
which has moved so far to the right that even someone like Pence, who 
doesn't always go along with Trump, feels compelled to take that 
extreme position.
  And lest we forget, folks, nearly every Senate Republican--nearly 
every Senate Republican--already voted to push national abortion bans 
in 2020, in 2018, and 2015. During one of these votes, the Senator from 
South Carolina, who introduced the nationwide ban again yesterday, 
said:

       These pieces of legislation will continue to be advanced 
     until they pass.

  How do we know that Republicans will put a national abortion ban on 
the floor if they control the Senate? Not only has Senator Graham 
committed to doing it, they have done it before, three times. And they 
will do it again if they get the majority. America, beware. America, 
beware.
  So the truth is not hard to grasp. Republicans do not care about 
leaving abortion in the hands of the States. No way. They do not care 
that a majority of Americans supported Roe and support abortion rights.
  What MAGA Republicans care about deep down is eliminating freedom of 
choice across America, period. And they are already at work right now 
on legislation, as we heard yesterday, that will take us down that 
terrible, terrible path.
  Well, it is my view that the American people aren't going to be 
fooled by Republicans' desperate attempts to seem mainstream. You can't 
fake your way through an issue so personal and so important as a 
woman's right to make her own healthcare choices. They are not going to 
be able to run and duck and bob and weave and tie themselves in pretzel 
knots. Everyone knows where they are at. Lindsey Graham made it clear 
again yesterday. And people will know the Republican view: abolish 
abortion everywhere. That is not going to change no matter what some on 
the other side might think.


                    Inflation Reduction Act of 2022

  Mr. President, now, on the positive impacts of the Democratic agenda, 
a much happier note. As I said a moment ago, while MAGA Republicans 
spent yesterday touting their extreme agenda, Democrats focused on the 
things that matter most right now to the American people: lowering 
costs, creating good-paying jobs, and protecting our planet for future 
generations.
  The Inflation Reduction Act has not been law for even a month--not 
just a month--and already it is spurring new investments that will 
generate years, if not decades, of robust economic activity, in 
industries that will stay here in America--here in America, not in 
China, not anywhere else--for a very long time.
  A remarkable number of companies in the energy, automotive, and clean 
tech sectors have announced that they are either approving or 
accelerating new plans to grow their businesses.
  One of the most significant areas of activity is happening in EVs and 
battery manufacturing, so crucial to meeting our country's growing 
demand for electric vehicles. China has dominated battery manufacturing 
for too long, and we are bringing these jobs back to America--not just 
talking about it, doing it.
  Honda and LG, for instance, have teamed up to invest $4 billion for a 
new battery plant with an annual production of 40 GWh.
  Hyundai, meanwhile, has announced they might actually accelerate 
their timetable for building new state-of-the-art EV and battery plants 
in Savannah, GA. Plans called for getting started early next year, and 
now they are saying it could happen sooner. And it is the votes of 
people and the activity of people like Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff 
that have made that happen.
  Of course, the benefits of our bill extend well beyond EVs and 
batteries. Solar Energy Industries Association projects that by 2027, 
the U.S. solar market will grow 40 percent more than expected thanks to 
the Inflation Reduction Act. And numerous companies focused on 
renewables, carbon capture, and heat pumps are announcing a flurry of 
investments, very often citing our bill--now law--the IRA.
  All of these examples share something important: These are the jobs 
of tomorrow. These industries are going to stick around for decades as 
our country makes the transition away from fossil fuels and towards 
cleaner forms of energy. The impacts will be felt everywhere. It is 
going to take millions of workers to build these vehicles, reshape our 
infrastructure, and install these technologies in our homes and 
offices.
  And because so much of this will be done by union labor, these will 
be good-paying jobs, at good wages, with good benefits, lifting up the 
middle class, keeping those who are in the middle class there and 
allowing many others who are climbing that ladder to get into the 
middle class and stay there. It is a wonderful and beautiful thing. In 
a certain sense we did the right thing making sure our planet doesn't 
burn up, but it had so many other effects, like good-paying jobs and 
strengthening the middle class.
  And had we not taken action to encourage these investments, it is 
likely many of these jobs would end up going overseas to Asia, to 
Europe. America would have lost out. Instead, we have a real chance to 
lead the way again.
  This is the result of Democrats leading the way here in Congress. We 
are proud, every one of us is proud of the steps we have taken to lower 
energy costs, to create jobs that have a real future in this country, 
and to give working families a chance to climb up those ladders and get 
into that middle class.
  It is all about restoring that sunny American optimism that has been 
at the core of our economic prosperity for so long, that some felt had 
passed us by; but, no, we Democrats said it hasn't passed us by. The 
best of our future is yet to come.