[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 148 (Wednesday, September 13, 2023)]
[House]
[Page H4273]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LET'S FUND THE GOVERNMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Wisconsin (Mr. Pocan) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POCAN. Mr. Speaker, as of today, Congress has less than 3 weeks
to reach an agreement on government funding before the September 30
deadline. If we cannot complete this fundamental task, the one thing we
have to do as Members of Congress, we risk shutting down the
government, an outcome that would have devastating consequences for the
American economy, American families, and our national security.
I wish I could stand here and talk about all the great bipartisan
work that the House Appropriations Committee has been doing and
reassure you that we are on track to fund the government on time, but
unfortunately that is far from reality.
This year, House Republicans have abandoned bipartisanship and
instead chose to draft some of the most extreme partisan and harmful
legislation that I have ever seen. Their bills would enact devastating
cuts that would jeopardize our children's education and futures, weaken
our rural communities, increase costs for families, and leave our
country less safe by directly cutting funds for necessary law
enforcement.
On top of this, they have packed these bills to the brim with extreme
policy riders that have no chance of becoming law, including abortion
bans and extremist discriminatory policy.
We often say that your budget is a reflection of your values, and
these shameful funding bills show that the House Republicans are
lacking many.
It doesn't have to be this way. Over in the Senate, Democrats and
Republicans have put together bipartisan funding bills, all of which
have passed out of the Senate Appropriations Committee with
overwhelming bipartisan support. House Republicans, however, are on an
island of their own, seeking to jam their rightwing ideology down the
throats of the American people or else subject them to a shutdown that
will have devastating consequences. This would be the height of
irresponsibility.
It has become clear that the House Republicans do not have a plan.
Faux impeachment is just a distraction. They do not have a strategy,
and the chaos and confusion will come at a cost of a government
shutdown that the American people cannot afford.
Republicans in the House need to do the right thing: Come to the
table with Democrats and both parties in the Senate and let's fund the
government. It is not rocket science. It is just basic governance.
Wisconsin Shouldn't Impeach Justice Protasiewicz
Mr. POCAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak about what is happening
in my home State of Wisconsin. There are calls from the gerrymandered
State assembly to impeach the newest State supreme court justice before
they have even heard a case.
Justice Janet Protasiewicz was elected overwhelmingly. She defeated
her opponent by more than 200,000 votes. She won by 11 points. In a
purple State like Wisconsin, that is a landslide. However, because she
mentioned that Wisconsin's extremely gerrymandered State legislative
and congressional districts might be a problem, the current State
assembly is threatening to use their impeachment powers before she even
has a chance to hear a case.
The State assembly is trying to overturn the will of the voters
because they don't like who won the election. Using this logic, if the
legislature doesn't like the possible outcomes of any election or cases
before the court, it can conceivably threaten impeachment without
actual cause and undermine the separation of powers of government. The
legislature does not trump the judiciary. They are co-equal branches of
government.
Under the Republicans' absurd logic, they could threaten impeachment
over their gerrymandered maps or keeping Wisconsin's 1849 abortion law
or even potentially over giving themselves a pay increase even if they
thought the court would find it unconstitutional.
There is a standard for impeachment. It is for wrongdoing in office,
not for disagreeing with the legislature. The fact that Justice
Protasiewicz has not heard a single case makes this even more
ridiculous.
Now the Republicans in Wisconsin are maybe changing their tune. They
likely realize this impeachment farce might be a bad idea, but that is
not stopping them from coming up with new bad ideas to stay in power.
Now they claim they want an independent commission, a Trojan horse, to
distract as a way to stay in power, an idea that they previously
dismissed.
If the Republicans don't like the so-called fair maps that come out
of this commission, they can still draw their own maps under this
Trojan horse plan. It only requires a simple majority, which when you
have gerrymandered maps, you certainly have. This is wrong. It does not
represent Wisconsin's values and, frankly, it is un-American.
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