[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 202 (Thursday, December 7, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5839-S5840]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]


                           EXECUTIVE CALENDAR

  Mr. SCHUMER. I move to proceed to executive session to resume 
consideration of the Executive Calendar No. 352.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The motion was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the nomination.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk read the nomination of Richard 
E.N. Federico, of Kansas, to be United States Circuit Judge for the 
Tenth Circuit.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
  Mr. HAWLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to be able to 
speak for up to 15 minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. HAWLEY. Mr. President, earlier this summer, millions of Americans 
learned about the origins of our country's nuclear program.
  What, perhaps, more Americans are learning about now are the tens of 
thousands of brave American citizens who risked their health and, in 
many instances, gave their lives to make that program a success. And 
what many are learning now is that those Americans who risked their 
lives, who gave their health, did it without the knowledge that their 
government was exposing them to nuclear radiation, without the consent 
from their government, and for years and years and years without any 
kind of help or any kind of compensation, so much so that in 1990, this 
body passed a landmark piece of legislation that compensates the 
victims of the government's Oppenheimer-era nuclear program--those who 
were exposed to nuclear tests, those who were exposed to the radiation 
from nuclear waste without their consent and often, usually, in fact, 
without their knowledge.
  This body passed a landmark piece of legislation that included some 
findings that I just want to read here. This body said: The health of 
those individuals who were unwitting participants in these tests and 
were put at risk to serve the national security interest of the United 
States deserve compensation.
  They went on to say--this body did--that the United States should 
recognize and assume responsibility for the harm done to these brave 
Americans.
  Finally, Congress actually offered an apology--something you don't 
see often--an apology to its people whom it had exposed to nuclear 
radiation. Congress apologized on behalf of the Nation to the 
individuals and their families for the hardships they have endured. 
That was exactly the right thing to do.
  But today Congress is effectively rescinding that apology because 
today Congress is moving forward, the Senate is moving forward with the 
Defense bill that strips this program out of the law, that allows this 
program to expire, that turns its back on the tens of thousands of good 
Americans who have sacrificed for their country, who have served their 
country, who have dutifully given their health and, in many cases, 
their lives to this country and have gotten nothing. And those who have 
depended on this compensation provided from 1990 will soon get nothing 
because today this body decides to allow that program to expire.
  How did this happen? Just earlier this year, in July, I stood right 
there in the well of the Senate as this body passed, on an overwhelming 
bipartisan basis--61 votes on the floor of the Senate--to reauthorize 
the nuclear compensation program and to update it to include more 
Americans who we now know--we have learned since 1990, thousands of 
more Americans who were exposed to the government's nuclear waste and 
radiation, including thousands and thousands in my home State in the 
State of Missouri.

  We voted for it. We voted for it on an overwhelming bipartisan basis. 
I would go so far as to say, it would be pretty hard to get 61 Senators 
to vote for vanilla as a good ice cream, and yet 61 Senators voted yes 
to renew this program, to preserve it, to keep our commitment to the 
good people of this country.
  And yet today, the program is gone. Today, the bill before us on the 
floor of the Senate, it is nowhere to be found.
  What happened? What happened is what so often happens in this town 
and in this body. A backroom deal is what happened. Yes, the leaders of 
Congress went to a back room, and over the last few weeks, negotiated 
away this compensation for these thousands and thousands of Americans--
negotiated away, voted for by the Senate, relied on for 30-plus years 
by thousands of Americans, and now it is gone.
  Why? Because it is more important to pay the defense contractors than 
to pay the suits. Oh, the suits will get paid. Mark that down. That is 
always true in Washington. The defense contractors will get paid, you 
can bet your bottom dollar. We have more than enough money for them.
  But for the people of my State who are sick with cancer because of 
the government's nuclear waste, they get nothing. For the people of New 
Mexico or Idaho or Colorado or Arizona or Washington State or Oregon 
State or anywhere else in this country exposed to the government's 
nuclear test and radiation, they get nothing.
  This is a grave injustice. This isn't an inconvenience. This isn't an 
oops. I wish it were different. This is an injustice. This is this body 
turning its back on these good, proud Americans.
  This is the Senate prioritizing--I don't know what. It is certainly 
not the national security of the United States because the greatest 
strength of the United States is in the people of the United States, 
and this bill turns its back on the people of the United States in 
defense of the lobbyists and the suits and the corporate entities who 
are going to get paid. Hand over fist, they are going to make money 
while the American people get left out in the cold.
  I am not going to vote for this bill, to say the least. And I am 
going to do everything in my power to slow it and stop it if I can.
  I want to introduce my colleagues and the rest of the country to some 
of the victims, some of the people who are going to get turned out in 
the cold because of the decision made by the leadership of this 
Congress.
  Let me start with Zoey. You are looking at a picture of her here. 
This is Zoey from St. Louis. Zoey was born with a mass on her ovary--
born with a mass on her ovary. She had surgery to remove it when she 
was just 3 weeks old. She is 5 now. But just last night, Zoey's parents 
had to rush her to the hospital for an MRI because she remains in 
incredible pain.
  Why does Zoey have cancer? Why was she born with a mass on her 
ovaries? Because she grew up in an area that has known nuclear 
contamination from the Manhattan Project that the government has not 
cleaned up and has not compensated Zoey or her parents for.
  Take a good look. This is whom the Senate is leaving out in the cold. 
This is who congressional leadership has decided is not important. It 
is girls like Zoey, 5 years old.
  Meet Zack. This is baby Zack. He was born with a rare brain tumor, 
one that is known to be caused by nuclear radiation. Zack had his first 
surgery when he was 1 week old--1 week. He started chemo when he was 3 
months old--3 months. I bet there are many people within the sound of 
my voice who have been on chemo and know what it is like. Can you 
imagine a 3-month-old baby on chemo to start his life? Zack died when 
he was 6.
  Why was Zack sick? Zack grew up in an area of St. Louis, was born in 
an area of St. Louis that is known to have nuclear contamination. His 
mother Kim grew up along a place called Cold War Creek, which is, even 
as I stand here and speak, still contaminated--still contaminated--with 
nuclear radiation.
  Why don't we meet Mary. Mary lived her entire life in St. Louis. She 
went to high school there. She met her husband there, got married, and 
raised a family there. When she decided to go to nursing school to try 
to give something back to her community that had done so much for her, 
she was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer.

[[Page S5840]]

  She died last year, leaving her husband and two children. Mary grew 
up in an area of St. Louis known to have nuclear contamination. This is 
yet another person whom this body, today, chooses to leave behind.

  Then there is Chantelle. Chantelle has been diagnosed with two 
different kinds of breast cancer. She has had 13 surgeries--13--
including a double mastectomy, gallbladder removal, and a full 
hysterectomy. Chantelle's mother died of breast cancer. Her aunt died 
of breast cancer. Her grandfather died of pancreatic cancer. Her two 
cousins have breast cancer. And a nephew now has a cancerous brain 
tumor. Chantelle is from a region in St. Louis that--I think you 
guessed it--is known to have nuclear contamination. Chantelle is yet 
another good American whom this body now chooses to leave behind.
  This next photo is of Kirbi. Kirbi is from Missouri also. She is 
holding a picture of her daughter Kirstee. Her daughter Kirstee, who is 
here in this photo, was diagnosed with a rare childhood form of brain 
cancer and died when she was 13. Kirstee was born in an area that 
studies have identified as having dramatically higher instances of 
childhood cancers. Kirstee and her family will get nothing now because 
of the actions of this body.
  The radiation hasn't been cleaned up. The contamination has not been 
dealt with. Her family has not been given a dime of help--a dime--not 
only for her death but for the who-knows-how-many hundreds of thousands 
of dollars in medical bills they have had to pay.
  Finally, we have the students at Jana Elementary School. Take a good 
look at these students. Here, they are sitting in their lunchroom at 
school. But the problem is, they can't go to school anymore--nope. Not 
a one of these students can go to school at this elementary school. 
Why, you may ask? Because it is closed. Why is it closed? Because the 
creek that runs right by their school is full of radioactive waste.
  Here today, as we sit here, 2023, years after the Manhattan Project 
concluded, their school is full of nuclear contamination, and now they 
are being shipped off to other schools, to other places. They can't do 
a thing about it. Take a look at them. These are the voiceless 
Americans whom, today, this body turns its back on. These are the 
people who deserve the apology that this body first offered in 1990, 
who deserve the compensation for the sacrifices they have made. Yet 
they will get none of it.
  But who is going to get paid? Oh, well, the defense industry is going 
to get paid big-time. Oh, yeah. A recent analysis found that this bill 
contains not only almost $1 trillion in new defense spending; it 
contains $26 billion--the Defense appropriations bills do--$26 billion 
for programs that the Pentagon didn't even ask for--$26 billion that 
they didn't ask for--in 1 year. Yet we are told that those students you 
just saw and every young person, old person, good person whom I have 
just shown you--we just don't have enough money for them.
  Oh, we just can't do anything for you. We can pay these people until 
the cows come home, but we can't do anything for you.
  We have plenty of money for Raytheon and all the rest. We don't have 
a dime for the people of Missouri. We don't have a dime for the Navajo 
Nation. We don't have a dime for the people of New Mexico. We don't 
have a dime for the working poor who are sick because of their 
government's radiation. We don't have a dime. But we must hurry on to 
make sure the corporations get their money. Well, Mr. President, not 
with my support--not with my support.
  I would just say to those congressional leaders who negotiated this 
package--Speaker Johnson, Senator McConnell: Your actions have earned 
my opposition.
  I would say to the good people of the State of Missouri who have 
endured for decade upon decade: This fight is not over.
  To the people of this Nation, tens of thousands who have depended on 
this compensation, lifesaving help, who now are at risk of losing all 
of it: This fight is not over.
  I understand some high schools in the Missouri area may be watching 
now. I just want to assure you: I will come to this floor as long as it 
takes. I will introduce this bill as long as it takes. I will force 
amendment votes as long as it takes, until we compensate the people of 
this Nation who have sacrificed for this Nation and do not leave them 
behind.
  The failure to do so now is a scar on the conscience of this body, 
and I will remind my colleagues of it as long as it takes, until we 
make it right.
  I yield the floor.