[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 108 (Wednesday, June 21, 2023)]
[House]
[Pages H3056-H3061]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 2000
MY 40-YEAR ADDRESS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 9, 2023, the gentlewoman from
[[Page H3057]]
Michigan (Ms. Stevens) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of
the minority leader.
Ms. STEVENS. Mr. Speaker, I am calling this Special Order hour the
40-year address, not to self-aggrandize, although I am marking that
milestone year on Saturday when the House Chamber is not open and I
will not be able to make such an address, but more so to reflect, to
look back, to comment on how we got here, and on what it means as
Michigan's 11th District has only had in the 187 years of our State's
existence 25 Members of Congress.
I happen to be the 25th Member of Congress to hold Michigan's 11th
District, and I happen to be the first woman to ever represent
Michigan's 11th District and, therefore, the first woman to ever turn
40 in Michigan's 11th Congressional District.
By right, I also claim that I am the first millennial whom Michigan
ever sent to Congress in the year 2018. It was that magnificent year
when many men and women stood up to run for Congress. A lot of us
called ourselves the never evers. We had never ever run for office
before, but we felt a call to serve in the face of what we saw as
leadership taking this country backwards, leadership in the Oval
Office, leadership that was putting forward terminology that was dubbed
the Muslim ban in the early 21st century which was almost inconceivable
particularly for me representing and coming from southeastern Michigan,
a place of great Arab-American presence and all the frustration that we
felt with governance by Twitter and anti-democratic principles, but
more so because of love of country.
I could start with when I got to Congress, but I don't think that
would be totally appropriate because there was a journey to getting
here, and it is a journey we are sharing in this largely empty Chamber
before the C-SPAN cameras and before the folks watching at home of what
brought us here and what brought me here.
I did not come from a family that was preordained to send a daughter
to Congress. I was born in the eighties, a decade I barely remember,
partly because a person doesn't gain full consciousness as a human
being until age 5, so largely the eighties were not that memorable. Of
course, my parents have great memories of that decade and the decade
prior to it.
My parents are surely incredible people, incredibly hardworking
Michiganders. My mom came to Michigan by way of Oakland University. She
graduated a year early. She was always ahead of her time. She worked
her way through school. In the school cafeteria she was washing dishes.
I think she finished school 3 years early.
She probably wanted to do something in the STEM field but,
interestingly, the woman who went on to Congress and founded the Women
and STEM Caucus is the daughter of a woman who was told the only thing
she could study in school was either education or art history. So she
studied art history, and she is to this day, obviously, a masterful
painter.
More than that, my mother's life is determined by very hard work and
exceptional brilliance, tinkering around with electronics and masterful
woodcarving. I have one of the lifelike carved eagles that she did in
the nineties in my office in the Rayburn House Office Building.
She met my father at Oakland University. He was still working on
school, and my dad had started a landscaping business right when he was
out of high school. Again, he was so dogged at that practice of working
with the earth and working with the soil and planting the trees and
knowing every type of plant, bush, and shrub out there, how to design
it and make it look good.
Of course, my parents ended up going into business together. They
were just kids in the seventies. Oh, gosh, they were hippies. I know my
mom has stories, of course, of hitchhiking the country. We do not do
that really today; there is Uber.
She hitchhiked the country. She also marched for women's rights and
protested against the Vietnam war and went on to this endeavor called
Nitro Feed with my father.
They had multiple acres of land out in Macomb County in Utica for
this endeavor of theirs, this landscaping business that became the
first tree spray company in Michigan.
In the winter when we couldn't landscape in Michigan, they would plow
snow. My dad would plow the snow. The inside joke in my family was that
my dad would wake up at any hour to the sound of the snow falling to
make sure that people could get to work and that they could park in
their parking lots. They employed a lot of people, and they had a lot
of fun. Like folks were doing in the eighties and nineties, they were
making a little bit of money.
Of course, my mom went into business with her sister. These are two
female trailblazers. We always say that my Aunt Marcie is sort of the
third parent and matriarch of our family. These two sisters are
daughters of a woman who had four sisters and Italian roots that trace
back to Cleveland, Ohio.
Interestingly, as I am making this address on the eve of my personal
anniversary, my colleague, Congresswoman Shontel Brown who hails from
Cleveland, Ohio, and represents the 11th District of Ohio, and we call
ourselves twin sisters because we share a birthday and we share a
district number.
Then I say: My family came from Cleveland, in Mayfield Heights, in an
old Italian neighborhood. Of course, this is something that sisters
from the Midwest know about hard work and communication.
The business that my aunt and mother got into was communications.
They were in advertising. And, again, a lot of hard work and trials and
tribulations but a whole heck of a lot of fun transforming our State
and the dialogue of healthcare and how women talk about healthcare,
talking about menopause, mammograms, and things that were taboo in the
nineties and that great awakening that we had around mental health.
So some of these life reflections of my family and the things that
they exposed me to are something that is very humbling to share on this
House floor.
I was born in Rochester Hills, Michigan. I like to say that I took my
first breath of air from ZIP Code 48309 at the old Crittenton Hospital.
Of course, Rochester Hills' claim to fame is that is where Madonna,
the singer, the 1980s phenomenon, was from. Her mother, Joan Ciccone,
ran a small daycare that I attended as a toddler and a little bit into
elementary school.
Again, family business, good Italian family business, and there are
stories from the neighborhoods of friends, mothers, or parents who knew
Madonna in high school. We, of course, remember Mrs. Ciccone picking up
the phone and saying: Hello, Madonna. My brother, who doesn't like any
attention, remembers one time that Madonna came to visit. He swears
Madonna came to visit.
That was growing up in Rochester Hills, what was largely known as
exurban, the suburbs outside of the suburbs. Now it is a little more
populated and built up. My mother can certainly remember stories of
sledding down Rochester Road before all the businesses moved in. Of
course, I remember walking down Alston Street with my good friend,
Rachel, to elementary school. She is my dearest--I like to call her my
oldest friend but sometimes oldest feels disparaging, but she is my
longest friend in life.
We would walk down Alston together, and there are a lot of funny
stories about me being fearful of her family dog who barely could move
and me not wanting to ring her doorbell.
The reason I share these personal reflections and these stories is
that I certainly was not afraid to put my hand up and get involved in
student activities and student governments or theater or performances
or things like that, but I also share these stories because nothing in
life is fully ever determined.
We know that we make our own destiny. My running for office
eventually one day in life was not something preordained. It was not a
given that I was going to come to Congress. I know so many of my
colleagues through so many of their personal trials and tribulations
join me in sharing this message to the next generation which is that
life is uncertain and growing up is tough.
This new generation, our Generation Z, who is racked with the unique
challenges of this century, a global pandemic--we just saw the headline
this morning about test scores still being
[[Page H3058]]
behind--and certainly the challenges of climate change and gun
violence, that compels us. When you are young and you are still
dependent and you are maybe just getting out of those teenage years,
Mr. Speaker, into early adulthood and wondering how you are going to
make your way in the world, it is important to recall and to look to
those who have done what no one called to ask them to do, but just what
they felt compelled to do and to make a difference.
I firmly believe that we still need to believe in this place. We
still need to believe in this institution. I could be doing something
else this evening, but I have really believed and thought that it would
be important to give this address in the House Congressional Record
spoken verbally. Sometimes you can write these addresses and just
submit them for the Record, but I wanted to take the time to speak
these words.
It just so happens that speaking these words on this day, June 21--
the solstice--is really actually quite remarkable. The solstice is a
day that comes twice a year. It either comes when it is today when the
sun is reaching its maximum destination or its maximum declining and
the longest or shortest day of the year. My mother was actually born on
the shortest day of the year. Today is the longest day of the year,
and, of course, then it begins the reaching toward the shortest day. It
also marks summer.
I haven't spent too much time outside today here in Washington, D.C.,
in the Nation's Capital. It has been a very unusual late spring, now
first day of summer. It is cold in Washington. It is 60-some degrees
and raining. One reaches for a shawl on weather like today.
I have a friend back home in Michigan whom I asked: What is the
weather like at home?
He shared that it is 80 degrees in my beloved Michigan, and it is the
perfect ringing day to summer.
It is, of course, also unique and special in all of these hyper-
partisan times to reflect on the solstice and the marking of summer
because it is man's and human's experience in nature and this
recognition that something exists beyond us and something that got done
right in Washington a long time ago is the House on the hill, the
Capitol on the hill, it is surrounded by nature. It is surrounded by
beautiful trees and green and the Mall that you can walk out on, Mr.
Speaker, and go see the monuments.
Of course, some of us remember the wild fox that was scampering
around. That was last term. We can see some wildlife.
I believe just as many who have been in this Chamber from centuries
ago likely recognize the importance of the role that nature plays in
our life.
The words of the poet William Wordsworth who was not an American but
an English poet speak out:
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
I am not the only one who speaks poetry in this Chamber, of course.
Mr. Steny Hoyer, our former majority leader emeritus is one to quote
Tennyson on occasion.
It is certainly quite grounding as people of this great country, and
it is elected officials who use our words, who use our words to move,
make change, and bring this Nation to a new place. Sometimes those
words can feel contentious or bottled up on competition or trying to
win something. In other times, the words can bring us together, the
words can call upon us to reflect. The words can call upon us to look
above and look at the beauty all around us even on a cloudy solstice-
beginning summer day here in Washington, D.C.
{time} 2015
As I have taken some time to reflect a little bit on my life--and I
really can't tell you all how deeply humbling and somewhat
uncomfortable it is to even talk about yourself in this body, this well
of democracy.
I purposely chose to come to the center, the floor of the House, what
I believe is the House floor, the center of gravity of our democracy.
When we have been waging great debates in the Congress over many
years, I have long implored my colleagues to take it off cable news
because that is somewhat filtered, and, of course, doctored.
Our journalists play a great role, but take your discourse to the
well, to the floor of the House, to the center of democracy.
Engage in the great debate of this institution for Americans to see
unfiltered. Somebody at the Juneteenth event in Huntington Woods pulled
me aside, and they said, I am just so exhausted with how polarized it
feels, with how partisan it feels. I can't take it.
I said, well, are you watching the news?
And she said, no, I am not watching the news.
I said, well, tune in to C-SPAN because maybe you can't come to
Washington and join us in the gallery, but come to C-SPAN and watch
your government in action.
Of course, sometimes there is tough debate. As we just saw with my
colleagues passing the suspension bills, one that just passed
unanimously, it is bipartisan. It is coming together to solve problems
and coming together to make a difference.
I certainly do not ever seek to undermine or doubt the intentions of
any of my colleagues, although on occasion, their approach may
frustrate me.
We are all equal as duly elected Members of this Chamber when we come
here to vote. Our Founding Fathers in the era of the Founders and those
who maintained this institution, America, as a fledgling--and we are
still a fledgling democracy, in my opinion.
Our country is about to turn 247 years old. We can look to some of
the most ancient societies, the longest-standing countries in this
world, this world that is also 4\1/2\ million years old, and wonder
what they think and how they are looking to us.
Yet, we can look inward. We shouldn't exclusively look inward, but we
can look inward and reflect that we have accomplished a lot in these
246 years; the governing doctrine of this very Nation that still
determines how an individual like Haley Stevens can get to Congress
every other year.
The incredible voting electorate of Michigan's 11th District, that is
now comprised exclusively of the great Oakland County, in Michigan
takes a vote. They take a vote, and they determine who is going to be
their representative voice in the Congress.
That is why when we have the privilege of being here in Washington,
and, of course, people come and visit--we had a great day, which I will
share a little bit about our day in a moment.
When people come to Washington, and they share their needs, or when I
am home in Michigan, so joyfully visiting the farmers' markets,
visiting the small businesses, doing the manufacturing Mondays--I call
them manufacturing Mondays, by the way.
I visit our manufacturers. I see the innovation, the continued hard
work of our small businesses; men and women who are dedicated to the
production value of this Nation, made in the USA, something that is
demanded and called for throughout the world.
It is something that I am so ever committed to as an elected
Representative and as a former Obama administration official and as
somebody who once worked in a manufacturing research and development
institute.
Today, to share with anyone who might be watching, and to just give a
glimmer of what happens in a day for a Member of Congress, but there's
so much jammed in a day that it is, again, a real privilege to be able
to share and speak from this well of the House floor about what
occurred today.
I went to my beloved Committee on Science, Space & Technology markup.
We marked up three great bills on fire safety, on the utilization of a
mist for fire safety, and construction and management standards for
rebuilding after fires.
We are saying the words climate change in the hearing, in the markup.
We are saying the words climate change. We are recognizing. These are
bipartisan bills.
Again, you might recall that I am a Democrat, and I am in the
minority party, so I am at the whim of the chairman from the Republican
Party for the Committee on Science and Technology.
[[Page H3059]]
Yet, there we sit, chairman and ranking member and participating
members of the committee marking up bipartisan bills.
Of course, I spoke exuberantly on behalf of the bills and am looking
forward to their being passed through committee tomorrow.
We take our votes in committee, and then we are going to have a
hearing on artificial intelligence, which is certainly a topic that has
motivated and compelled the work of the Committee on Science and
Technology ever since I joined the Committee on Science and Technology
in my first term in Congress.
I am very fortunate to have served as the vice chair of the committee
when we were in the majority and the chair for the Subcommittee on
Research and Technology.
Folks might recall that when I helped lead the Congress through the
passage of the CHIPS and Science Act, industrial policy for this great
Nation. Let's make semiconductor microchips in this Nation again
because we innovated these things, and we let some people beat us at
our own game for a little bit.
Then the pandemic hit, the tide rolls out, and we don't have enough
chips. We decided to make chips in this country again by investing $50
billion that since the passage and signing of the bill in August of
last year, $50 billion has already beget $200 billion of private sector
invest.
Astronomical job creation, supply chain value for my State of
Michigan, and it is enormously exciting that we got that bill done.
I am so thrilled to have been a part of that committee, but that was
last year's activity. Of course, we carry the words of the things that
we have done into today.
As I was marking up the bills in committee, I was reflecting on the
bipartisan achievement of the CHIPS and Science Act last term, and we
have more to do on that. I will certainly get to that in a moment.
I also had the privilege of sitting down with a--I believe he calls
himself a president of a company. I don't know if he would want me
sharing this, but of course, I am sharing it. He did come to visit me.
He runs this company called Qualcomm. They are in this chips
business. I think this executive was in Washington today.
Well, he knew I was involved with this CHIPS Act, but they wanted to
share about this competition that we are in with China and the Chinese
Communist Party. This is something that I am very keen to as a
Representative of Michigan and as someone who served in President
Obama's administration as the chief of staff on the U.S. auto rescue,
the initiative that was responsible for saving General Motors and
Chrysler from liquidation and countless, hundreds of thousands of
Michigan jobs and certainly millions throughout this country.
We know the meaning of being able to make products here in the United
States of America and sell them all over the world.
That is the deal, right. That is why the day after the first
impeachment of President Trump in the year 2019, before the word COVID
ever entered our verbiage--true story--we impeached President Trump.
It was really kind of a sad day in this country, and we didn't get
justice that day. The following day we came back into this very Chamber
after it being so contentious and so divisive and so emotional.
Democrats and Republicans came back into this Chamber and passed the
trade deal, USMCA, a renegotiated NAFTA so that we could have a
framework for competing in the 21st century with the rest of the world;
strengthening by American content, plussing up our production value in
a State like Michigan.
By the way, it was endorsed by the critical stakeholders from both
organized labor, AFL-CIO, and UAW, to the automakers because 21st
century challenges beget 21st century solutions of coming together.
Of course, I am still talking about today. I am still talking about
why Qualcomm and maybe some other chip manufacturers are saying, hey,
we need to be able to sell to the world, all right, and we can't cut
ourselves off because some are chest thumping as we have done
throughout this century and the century prior for war.
We can call ourselves hawks. I don't call myself a hawk on China. I
am serious about the competition and the consideration and the
frustrations with the CCP.
I know that the Biden administration is attempting to lead just as
the administration prior and the administration prior did.
Of course, the dynamic has changed in the year 2023, but America has
got to be in the business of de-risking, and America has got to be in
the business of leading through smart power and strong power as an
open, democratic, capitalist society that says every person can succeed
and that we are working toward a more perfect union and the plight of
equality and justice.
I founded the Women in STEM Caucus because we want to bring more
people into the STEM field. It can't be acceptable that 5 percent of
women in STEM careers are Black and Brown.
It needs to be more. It cannot just be a talking point. It needs to
be a way of life. When we talk about expanding and when we work on
expanding the middle class, which had been shrinking, we talk about
uplifting people out of poverty.
It is not because anyone is looking to be endemically poor. That is
not the case. My great mother has shared many times over her thoughts
on this to me, which is that it is expensive to be poor.
It certainly is expensive in this day and age when you go to the
grocery store and when you pay your insurance bill and when you pay
your housing bill and when you pay to clothe and feed the kids and all
of this and that.
It is like you can't catch a breath. We are being squeezed. Instead
of finger-pointing, we need to be committed to the creation of good
jobs.
Good jobs means selling American-built, made, innovated, shipped
products to the world. You can't cut us off. It is not going to work,
right. The automakers will tell you that as well. The suppliers will
tell you that.
We need to be realistic. I am not going to overlook what has gone on
with Russia and Ukraine because I have been battling Putin since I got
into Congress, before I was sworn in.
Paul Whelan, the Novi resident in his fifth year in a Russian prison,
the canary in the coal mine for the lawlessness that Putin has pursued
on a global scale with this unbelievably outrageous, illegal, ongoing
war in Ukraine.
Russia isn't China. We were able to decouple. We brought the West
along with us. We are having the conversation on energy security and
what we need to do.
I am pragmatic and I am realistic about that. I am proud to have
voted for the Inflation Reduction Act, otherwise known as the largest
climate bill in history, clean energy incentives, which are
unbelievably impacting Michigan's economy right now; making batteries,
seeing our manufacturers rise as they do over and over again to the
charge of our time.
{time} 2030
I mention Mr. Whelan today because his beloved dog Flora, 15 years
old, as announced by his brother, has passed. So as Whelan is in
prison, we just passed the resolution calling on the Russian Federation
to release Whelan, condemning it. He will come home. I will not lose
hope. I stand by his family every day on this. He will come home, but
he is not coming home to his dog.
These are some of the things that have happened today.
The other thing that happened, which was really quite profound, and I
think I am allowed to show a prop, is that we held a ceremony honoring
the debut of the postage stamp of the Honorable John Lewis. It was
incredibly moving.
Speaker McCarthy had a reception afterward in the Rayburn Room. We
had biscuits and conversation. The minority leader of the Democrats,
the very eloquent and brave leader Hakeem Jeffries, spoke, as well. Mr.
Lewis' former chief of staff remembered him.
It was such an honor to be in one of his favorite places in the
Capitol, Statuary Hall, seeing the new postage stamp for John Lewis, a
man I was so privileged to serve with in his final term in office in
the 116th Congress and to be there with so many of my colleagues.
Of course, some other things happened today. We took more votes on
[[Page H3060]]
the House floor. Bizarrely, my colleagues on the other side of the
aisle censured--we are still trying to figure out what censuring
means--but they have condemned my colleague from California, Mr.
Schiff. It was really quite emotional for some. I mean, I don't think
people were tearing up, but it was emotional because a good portion of
us serving in the 118th Congress were here on January 6, 2021, and we
would just like to have some basic agreement about facts, right?
Look, you can't dwell and dwell, but we have to have some basic
agreement of facts that those who are seeking to censure, many of
them--and I do not speak disparagingly--I don't think any of them
really joined in the effort to condemn a man in the Oval Office who, as
Commander in Chief, watched this Capitol, a branch of his government,
be attacked.
You take an oath as the Commander in Chief to protect and serve. I am
not out here on what to some is known as or dubbed a witch hunt. I am
here for the truth. I am here for an honest conversation.
Of course, I am also here to make sure that we put into place the
policies that lead to good and great job creation, good and great
futures, because one thing that I have seen campaigning out in the
field in these incredible neighborhoods that comprise Michigan's 11th
District is that people are busy, and they often do not have time for
the blood sport of politics. They are relying on a government that
needs to make sure that they are succeeding and getting out of the way
to make sure that they are succeeding by putting into place policies
that build toward a more perfect Union.
This is what fires me up. This is what motivates me in the charges of
our times. I know so many who do engage in the civil discourse and the
public discourse and show up at townhalls and show up at community
meetings, those who have become a part of the activist organization
Moms Demand Action, calling for more commonsense gun safety
legislation.
Outside my office in the Rayburn Building, I have decided because of
my frustration over and outrage of gun violence in this country that I
have known my whole life, and even my parents have known in ways that
have been unimaginable--and I say ``my parents'' as in their
generation. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated. My father, who
was also an educator, was doing his student teaching in Pontiac,
Michigan, at Bethune Elementary when Martin Luther King, Jr., was taken
from us, as were John Lennon, John Kennedy, RFK. President Reagan was
shot.
Is this part of some sort of dramatic story of our Nation, or is this
a problem that we must fix?
Outside of my office are now the orange ribbons that have marked
every mass shooting just this year alone, and I am running out of space
on the wall for the ribbons. I am running out of space. We are almost
at 300. If you choose to feel, it is unimaginable.
I am on the Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the
United States and the Chinese Communist Party, and I don't want America
to appear weak, but this is not happening in China.
When we met with our counterparts in the British Parliament, they
looked at us and said: We had 40 people die from guns--4-0, not 40,000,
4-0 in the last year. We are at tens of thousands. This is human
capital.
We can talk about gun violence and talk about the opioid epidemic,
and we can talk about people dying from auto accidents, and certainly
the million people we lost from COVID-19, and say every life matters,
and we have to be committed to preserving life's existence. We have to
be committed not from a place of despair or frustration, but from a
place of motivation and dogged determination that we will address and
fix the scourge of gun violence in America.
It is clear that shame is not working. Calling out and calling out is
not working. Presenting the facts isn't working, but what will work, in
my opinion, is the arc of time.
Standing here as a woman, as I mentioned at the beginning of this
address, the first woman to represent Michigan's 11th District, it took
100 years to get suffrage achieved, to address the enfranchisement,
enfranchising women to be able to vote, when Congress had the most
number of women ever in history serving in its Chambers, both the House
and Senate.
Now, mind you, I want to concede this: We haven't even ever had 500
women total yet in the whole history of the body. In the 247 years of
America's existence, we have not had 500 women yet serving in the
Chamber, but we had over 100 in the year 2019, for that term, 2019 to
2020, marking 100 years of women's suffrage.
Of course, in 1920, when women's suffrage was achieved, you look back
and squint because 1848 was Seneca Falls. How many women who were at
Seneca Falls got to live to see their right to vote?
I reflected on my colleague who we honored today, Mr. Lewis. His
words that we go back to so many times as a Democratic Caucus ring
forward in this plight to ban assault weapons, to pass universal
background checks, to stop gun violence in America, to change our
culture, which I firmly believe we do by passing laws, not by seeing
children in Sandy Hook taken from us and not doing anything.
Mr. Lewis' words ring out: ``Do not get lost in a sea of despair.''
Let me say that again: ``Do not get lost in a sea of despair. Be
hopeful. Be optimistic. Our struggle is not the struggle of a day, a
week, a month, or a year. It is the struggle of a lifetime.''
Think of the women at Seneca Falls. Think of our country recognizing
and celebrating the second anniversary of the now-official Federal
holiday of Juneteenth that marked the end of slavery in this Nation.
Think of these long trials and tribulations that our young country has
gone through.
Before we were even erected as a nation, 400 years of slavery, and
only 158 years since it ended, something that was debated in this
Chamber.
Can you even imagine today? Then think of in the 21st century Mr.
Lewis' words. ``It is the struggle of a lifetime. Never, ever be afraid
to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble.''
Why take to the floor of the House to speak these words? Why take to
the floor of the House in recognition of a personal milestone and the
achievements that we have made on behalf of Michigan's 11th District?
Why take to the House floor during Pride Month, Equality Month?
I remember coming here in one of the first floor speeches I made for
marriage equality and fairness, letting people just love who they want
to love and be who they are. We have made so much progress that now it
has become another targeted issue for those who do not agree. They are
trying to twist it on its head.
I have so many colleagues this evening at the Equality PAC
celebration honoring Speaker Emeritus Nancy Pelosi, one of the original
trailblazers in this body for LGBTQ rights, and we are still going to
have the joy and the pride that comes with Pride Month because love is
louder and joy is more inclusive.
Of course, in Michigan, we are delightfully blessed with the first
statewide elected openly gay official, Ms. Dana Nessel, our attorney
general, who alongside the speaker pro tempore of the senate, Mr.
Jeremy Moss, one of Oakland County's finest, they declared loudly this
month in Michigan that we are the gayest State in the Union and that
all are welcome in Michigan because, again, we thrive when everyone
succeeds.
Of course, for some, this may not be your words or your declaration,
but I speak for so many. I speak for Ferndale. I speak for
affirmations. I speak for those who are watching and listening and
wondering what they are going to do with their lives and what it means.
I represent and speak for disabled individuals and folks who I am
fighting for on the Education and the Workforce Committee to fully fund
IDEA so that our school districts do not need to rob Peter to pay Paul,
so that we can properly educate every student in this country
regardless of ability. That is the purpose of public education.
If you want something else, you can pay for it and go do it, but gosh
darn it, we want everyone to have access to a good, quality education.
That is what pays dividends to our country. That is what pays dividends
back into our Treasury. Speaker Pelosi once shared
[[Page H3061]]
that, and I certainly join her in recognizing that point.
{time} 2045
Cost, indebtedness, hard work, how to get ahead, how to catch our
breath, and how to remain optimistic.
Sometimes it feels, to the outside world, maybe because they are not
watching C-SPAN, and they are only watching the news that flies off of
anger politics or divisiveness or red meat, but so much gets done here.
Now, in my fifth year here, I have mentioned a couple of times I
founded the Women in STEM Caucus. I also founded the Plastic Solutions
Task Force, alongside my colleague, Kim Schrier.
I formed the Democratic Manufacturing Working Group, alongside leader
Jim Clyburn, the great statesman from South Carolina, showcasing
delivery and dedication to the manufacturing economy of America. Of
course, I am also working on the bipartisan Manufacturing Caucus,
alongside a colleague from Ohio.
I passed my first bill within my first year in Congress, the Building
Blocks of STEM Act. It was signed on Christmas Eve. I wasn't at the
White House for the signing, but it got signed. It was about STEM
equity, making sure that more girls and girls of color can get included
into the STEM field.
Will our work ever be done in this Chamber?
I hope not, because democracy thrives when people choose to
participate in it. Democracy thrives when people choose to tune in
during the middle of the week, on a rainy solstice day, maybe to
listen, maybe to think, maybe to input. The tens of thousands of
correspondence letters that we reply to in my office, the people
writing in.
The ideas that come from knocking on the door in our neighborhoods.
The Alleviating Intergenerational Debt Act that I introduced because I
knocked on the door of this incredible family in Hazel Park, and mom
and dad introduced me to their kids who were going off to Michigan
State.
Dad said, Haley, it is really expensive. I said, I know, college has
gotten unbelievably expensive. And we are applying for financial aid.
He said, you know, Haley, it's outrageous, we didn't qualify for
financial aid. I am a UAW worker. My wife here is a UAW worker. I have
$90,000 student loan debt myself as a parent and I don't qualify for
financial aid. Why is that?
So I went back, with a very hardworking member of my staff from
Oakland County, Sammi Goldsmith, and we looked at this very diligently,
and we found that this is a loophole in the financial aid formula.
So we introduced legislation to change it so that that family's
daughter doesn't have to have the debt that dad has. Commonsense
solutions, expand Pell grants, expand access to apprenticeship training
programs, showcase our unions which allow you to earn as you learn.
There is so much to be proud of, by the way. So I am not just hemming
and hawing. I am feverishly working on the solutions for tomorrow. I am
feverishly working alongside my colleagues, even on tough days or tough
moments, like with what happened with the censure earlier today, we
remain committed.
We passed the CHIPS and Science Act. We know we need to do more. We
need to fund basic scientific research. I was so proud, as the chair of
the Research and Technology Subcommittee, to pass the National Science
Foundation for the Future Act, that doubled basic scientific research
funding in this country. Except it was just an authorization; it wasn't
an appropriation.
I don't know what the rest of this year has in store. I don't have a
crystal ball.
We didn't default on our debt. Some who sought to undermine the
fiscal integrity of our Union by allowing America to default on its
debt, it didn't happen because a bipartisan group of commonsense
lawmakers came together to say, no, we won't do that.
Now we have to pass a budget. The Federal Government needs to be
funded by September 30. So as the end of the year comes up, we are
going to talk about basic scientific research funding. We are going to
talk about food assistance. We are going to talk about making sure that
students can go to school and get access to food, free and reduced
lunch, a guarantee.
John Kennedy, President John Kennedy, gave an address 60 years ago
this month at my alma mater. He gave a speech about peace. Mr. Kennedy,
President Kennedy, comes from a time when it feels like there were
fewer spoken words. There were certainly less tweets. There was
certainly less cable news. Those words and the quotes, they carried
movement. They carried action. I think sometimes that is what feels so
frustrating about dealing with this scourge of gun violence. It is also
Gun Violence Prevention Month here in June. We can give the best
speech. We can write the most eloquent, smartest tweet. We have made
some change.
We passed a bipartisan bill to award funding to States that have
passed red flag laws, extreme risk protection order laws. Michigan just
did it, under the leadership of our great Governor, Gretchen Whitmer,
in the wake of tragic shootings at Michigan State and at Oxford and the
nearly everyday gun violence in too many neighborhoods across Michigan.
So we did pass that law.
Again, words, the words that I go back to, the words of Mr. Lewis, to
not despair, to be optimistic, because to be optimistic is to stay
active. It is to stay engaged. It is to stay agitated. It is to stay
feverish toward the work that we must do.
Yes, I will speak until my throat runs dry because this moment and
this activity, and my commitment to this democracy and being afforded
this time in this Chamber is too serious to pass it up.
But Mr. Kennedy, 60 years ago this month, you know, as we think of
other trying times, the Bay of Pigs, avoiding nuclear war, engagements
in Vietnam--a war that we did not win, that took too many American
lives, and we are so proud of our veterans and those who served.
Mr. Kennedy stood before American University and he said: ``I speak
of peace, therefore, as the necessary, rational end of rational men. I
realize that the pursuit of peace is not as dramatic as the pursuit of
war--and frequently the words of the pursuer fall on deaf ears. But we
have no more urgent task.''
It is certainly important and symbolic to reflect on those words
today and in these moments that are upon us as a Nation.
I look out and I use that as a rallying call for our work on the
Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and
the Chinese Communist Party, how to bolster American manufacturing,
American competitiveness, how to strengthen southeastern Michigan and
Oakland County, under the leadership of Dave Coulter, someone I am so
proud to work alongside.
Mr. Speaker, it has been 40 years of unimaginable innovation and
activity that has taken place in this Nation: In 1983, Sally Ride is
the first woman into space. 1985, has Microsoft Office first hitting
the stage. 1991, is the time when the world wide web hit our keyboards.
I remember my mother and my aunt taking me to a meeting. What is a
website? If only we could imagine what we would be in now; smartphone
devices connecting us at rapid speed. The way in which humanity evolved
and changed and then yet again, as technology drives us to be together.
The elixir of our alive experience here on planet Earth, and as
Americans, through love, through connection, and through ability. Those
things don't change. The meaning of family doesn't change. The meaning
of friendship doesn't change.
In the 1980s it was a race with the Japanese. Now it feels as though
it is a race with the Chinese. Open society, willingness to change,
commitment to action.
Ben Franklin once said: ``A long life may not be good enough, but a
good life is long enough.'' May we all commit to living the good life.
May we, as public servants, commit to goodness, to one another, to our
fellow Americans, and to this unbelievable and magnificent trajectory
our beloved Nation is on.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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