[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 151 (Tuesday, September 20, 2022)]
[House]
[Page H7971]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                        WE MUST NEVER BE ENEMIES

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
California (Mr. McClintock) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. McCLINTOCK. Mr. Speaker, as the tensions of the Civil War reached 
a boiling point, President Lincoln vainly reached out to Democrats with 
these words: ``We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be 
enemies.''
  The contrast with Mr. Biden's September 1 speech in Philadelphia is 
jarring. In it, and many remarks since, Mr. Biden clearly addresses the 
74 million Americans who voted for Donald Trump as enemies who 
``threaten the very foundation of our Republic.'' He condemned us as 
``extremists'' who ``do not respect the Constitution,'' and who ``do 
not believe in the rule of law'' and who ``refuse to accept the results 
of a free election.'' In other forums, he has called us ``semi-
fascists.''
  Mr. President, we revere our Constitution and the structure of 
individual liberty that it was designed to protect. We do not 
understand how a government established under that Constitution could 
use the FBI to pressure social media platforms to censor and suppress 
free speech or to intimidate parents concerned about their school 
boards with threat tags or to instruct its field offices to regard 
anyone who displays our founding American flag as a political 
extremist.
  Mr. President, we revere the rule of law and our Nation's promise of 
equal justice under law. We do not understand how our immigration laws 
can simply be ignored as millions of foreign nationals illegally enter 
our country. We do not understand how a dispute over records justifies 
an armed raid on a former President who is also a political rival.
  We do not understand how public health officials can order our 
schools and businesses closed or suspend our fundamental rights to 
worship and assemble with no vote of the people's Representatives. We 
do not understand how obvious influence peddling by the son of a 
President can be ignored for years.
  Mr. President, of course we accept the results of a free election, 
but we do not understand how the safeguards to protect the integrity of 
our elections can be torn down to benefit one party. Replacing in-
person election day voting with mail-in ballots, ballot harvesting, 
month-long voting, accepting ballots after election day, printing 
ballots on home computers--all of these changes undermine public 
confidence in the process that is essential to democracy.
  We wonder how you can call MAGA candidates a fundamental threat to 
our Republic while your party spends millions of dollars to nominate 
them when you believe it may help you in November.
  Mr. President, we can condemn all forms of violence and especially 
political violence in the strongest possible terms. The riot at the 
Capitol on January 6 was a disgrace and an abomination that you are 
right to condemn, and we join you in doing so.
  But we don't understand how you can at the same time turn a blind eye 
to prosecuting the political violence that burned our cities the year 
before or how you can refuse to enforce the laws that protect our 
Supreme Court Justices from intimidation at their own homes.
  Mr. President, we, too, fear for our democracy. We fear armed 
bureaucracies that seem increasingly disconnected from the results of 
our elections. We remember that the IRS singled out ordinary Americans 
because of their political views, yet no one was held accountable, and 
now we are adding 87,000 new agents to that bureaucracy.
  We fear arbitrary changes in our election laws calculated to skew 
results. We fear an executive branch that is increasingly taking over 
the legislative powers of Congress and judicial powers of the courts. 
We fear the powers of government wielded by officials who view half of 
our people as dangers, threats, and extremists--your words, Mr. 
President.

  Lincoln spoke of the mystic chords of memory tracing back to the 
founding of our Nation that must hold us together as Americans. As 
friends and not enemies. Yet we see these chords increasingly strained 
by an alien ideology that seems hostile to the flag, the principles, 
and the heritage of our Nation.
  We have only one President, Mr. President, and that is you. I didn't 
vote for you, and I won't vote for you again, but you are still my 
President. And the 74 million Americans who voted for Donald Trump are 
still your fellow citizens.
  As the person most responsible for the policies we now live with and 
the future that is unfolding before us, I ask you to engage us as a 
friend and not an enemy. We must not be enemies.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Members are again reminded to address their 
remarks to the Chair and not to a perceived viewing audience.

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