[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 184 (Wednesday, December 11, 2024)]
[House]
[Pages H7105-H7107]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




              DOING THE RIGHT THING REGARDLESS OF THE COST

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 9, 2023, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. 
Good) for 30 minutes.
  Mr. GOOD of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I rise to express my deep 
appreciation to the people of Virginia's Fifth District for the 
privilege of representing them these past 4 years. Being their 
Congressman has been the greatest honor of my professional life. When I 
answered the call 5 years ago to run for Congress, I identified as a 
Biblical and a constitutional conservative.
  I wanted the voters and my future constituents to know how I would 
make decisions, how I would represent them, and how I would vote on 
their behalf in Washington.
  I wanted them to know that my values and principles come from my 
Christian faith and my Biblical world view. I wanted them to know that 
my guiding political philosophy comes from the Constitution and its 
stated limits on Federal power.
  My allegiance as a Congressman has been to my creator, my Savior, the 
institution, the promises I made to my constituents, and to doing what 
I know is right regardless of the cost.
  My main priorities have been to cut spending, to shrink the Federal 
Government, to fight for America first border and immigration policies, 
and to protect our constitutional freedoms.
  As my time serving in this body on behalf of the citizens of 
Virginia's Fifth District comes to a close, I leave with no regrets 
because I have done as I told them I would do when I asked them to 
trust me with their vote and their support.
  My ultimate desire, however, has been to please the Lord, to be more 
concerned about offending Him by what I don't say than I am about 
offending others by what I do say.
  I didn't run for Congress promising to bring the money back home, to 
deliver the earmarks or the pork projects. I didn't run promising to 
work across the aisle, to compromise, or to find common ground, or to 
get things done. In fact, most of what we do here in Washington is bad, 
certainly unconstitutional, unjustified, and often downright harmful, 
not to mention we don't have the money, so the less we do, the better.
  In fact, we should be proud of the accusation that over the past 2 
years this Congress has done less than most Congresses.
  As Republicans, what should we have done more of that Biden and 
Schumer would agree to do?
  When I first ran for Congress in 2020, I presumed I would have the 
opportunity to serve with President Trump, help him build on the 
successes of his first term, and help him enact his second term agenda.
  Unfortunately, that has not been the case, and like most Republicans, 
my efforts have been by extreme necessity directed at fighting the 
Democratic agenda which has caused so much pain and suffering for the 
American people these past 4 years.
  That is because when Democrats seize power, they wield it without 
apology, and they ram through the radical agenda as they did in the 
first 2 years of the Biden administration with a narrow House majority 
and far less than 60 votes in the Senate.
  It is always about the money in Washington, and Democrats spent it 
lavishly and recklessly in 2021 and 2022 on their trillions for their 
ill-conceived and harmful COVID response, their inflation increase act, 
their phony infrastructure bill, and their radical climate agenda, all 
the while infusing every policy, department, and agency with their 
extreme pro-abortion, pro-transgender, pro-DEI, pro-CRT, and climate 
objectives.

                              {time}  1730

  Democrats are willing to lose elections to push and pull the Nation 
to the left, understanding that Republicans don't have the same 
political courage or willingness to risk their own elective futures to 
undo the harm, overturn the policies, or defund the programs.
  Thankfully, however, the American people responded to the extreme 
Democratic agenda by entrusting Republicans with the House majority 2 
years ago in the 2022 midterms. Unfortunately, this Republican House 
majority has been squandered by a lack of courage, a lack of principle, 
and a lack of steely resolve by Republican leadership and too many 
Republican Members these past 2 years.
  Again, it is all about the money, and House Republicans could have 
blocked, stopped, and defunded anything and everything that we wanted 
to these past 2 years. We could have just turned off the spigot and 
refused to give them the money. Instead, we have funded and perpetuated 
the Biden-Pelosi-Schumer policies and spending levels that we inherited 
and campaigned against that are bankrupting and destroying the country.
  The Constitution entrusts the House to manage the Nation's finances, 
the Nation's debt, the Nation's credit, and our ability to borrow money 
if and when necessary and to make the payments on that debt.
  However, our national debt has grown by some $5 trillion in the 2 
years that Republicans have controlled the purse strings. We are 
failing miserably. Every dollar we vote on is borrowed. Every dollar 
borrowed and spent steals from Americans through higher taxes, more 
inflation, and/or a greater debt burden for our kids and our grandkids.
  Over the past 2 years, House Republicans have given more money to 
Mayorkas for the border invasion. As a matter of fact, back in the 
spring, we gave him $3 billion more to bring more illegals in quicker.
  We have given more money to Attorney General Garland and FBI Director 
Wray to abuse their power and weaponize Federal law enforcement against 
their political opponents.
  House Republicans have continued funding Democrats' radical climate 
extremism, their pro-abortion agenda, their pro-LGBTQ policies, and 
their racist DEI-CRT agenda.
  Why has our party leadership been more afraid to do nothing than to 
do something bad? As the medical folks like to say: First, do no harm.
  However, with predominantly Democratic votes, typically 90 to even 
100 percent of Democratic votes in a Chamber with a Republican 
majority, our report card shows that, since electing our current 
Speaker 14 months ago, we have failed to cut $1 of spending and have 
instead continued a $200 billion monthly deficit.
  We have passed four CRs, or continuing resolutions, and two minibuses 
maintaining Democratic policies and spending levels from the Biden-
Pelosi-Schumer regime when they had full control.
  We reduced our majority by kicking out George Santos, who had a solid 
conservative voting record and had not been convicted of any crime.
  We passed an NDAA maintaining abortion funding, LGBTQ policies, 
climate priorities, DEI policies, and CRT training. We reauthorized 
FISA twice without a warrant amendment prohibiting illegal and 
unconstitutional surveillance of U.S. citizens without their knowledge, 
due process, or probable cause.
  We have borrowed and funded tens of billions of dollars for Ukraine 
and even Hamas. We borrowed and funded thousands of earmarks for tens 
of billions of dollars more to provide Members with political cover 
back home for the bad votes they take here.
  We passed a tax bill that gave more benefits to illegal aliens. We 
failed to use any leverage that we had with the House majority to 
secure our borders.
  Just last month, we increased mandatory or, really, automatic 
spending by $200 billion more.
  All of this has been done over the past 14 months with significantly 
more Democratic than Republican votes when we have the House majority.
  What if we had instead shocked the American people and summoned the 
courage and the resolve to just say,

[[Page H7106]]

``Heck no, not on our watch,'' and walked away and refused to fund the 
very destruction of the country, destruction that we campaigned 
against.
  What if we had told Biden and Schumer: You aren't getting the money 
unless you cut some spending and reverse some of these harmful, 
dangerous policies.
  Instead, we are today contemplating borrowing $115 billion more for a 
disaster supplemental--that is what we are calling it, anyway--on top 
of other inevitable year-end lameduck spending increases.
  Setting aside the lack of constitutional justification for the 
Federal Government being in the disaster relief or insurance business 
anyway, and why we would force middle America to fund relief for the 
coastal elites in these high-cost areas, setting aside the 
constitutionality or lack thereof of doing that, why would we even 
think about borrowing and giving $1 more to the Biden administration in 
the remaining weeks of their regime? Why would we give the politicized 
and weaponized FEMA any more money before the end of this year?
  On November 5, the American people, thankfully, rejected the radical 
Democratic policies under which they have suffered these past 4 years. 
It wasn't a question of a Democratic Presidential candidate or the 
messaging or voter turnout. The fact is, Americans don't want the 
extreme Democratic agenda. They have had enough. The only alternative 
was the Republicans.
  Thankfully, at least for us politically, Democrats still don't grasp 
that, but we must not squander this reprieve and this tremendous 
opportunity that we were given by the American people on November 5. 
Americans desperately need our help. They desperately need us to rise 
to the occasion and to meet the moment.
  It can't be business as usual or how it has been for the past few 
decades. The American people are counting on us. They must count on us. 
There is no plan B. It is on this body.
  We are in the position that Democrats were in 4 years ago. After the 
2020 election, they were in control of the White House with a narrow 
House and Senate majority. We are in the same position.

  Mr. Speaker, as my colleagues know, we have talked a lot today, and 
we heard a lot of talk today about unity in our party, but unity for 
what purpose? Is it just to have the majority, so we can be in the 
majority, so we can stay in the majority? Is that the purpose?
  Unity is impossible without a unifying mission. What is ours? The 
Democrats are clearly united in their agenda, the direction they want 
to take the country, and they will risk anything and everything to 
advance that.
  Why do we want the majority? Why do we want to have power? For what 
purpose? What are our nonnegotiables to keep that power? What, if 
anything, are we not willing to give up or surrender in the name of 
obtaining or retaining power?
  I have often told the Republican Conference that we will never change 
Washington or save our country until it becomes more important for us 
to leave here having made a difference than it is to see how long we 
can stay. For far too many, the primary goal is to be here and to stay 
here as long as we can, even to die here of natural causes, it seems, 
and everything else is subordinate to that objective.
  We cannot be unified if we are willing to fund the very things we 
claim to oppose because some in our party believe it will help them get 
elected. Our party cannot be the goal or the objective unto itself, and 
our purpose cannot simply be to win elections to have the majority.
  What are our sacred principles, values, and convictions that cannot 
and must not be surrendered in order to obtain or retain power? Mr. 
Speaker, are there any? For what, if anything, are we willing to risk 
losing power to fight for? Is there any issue that transcends politics 
and elections for us? What is our foundation upon which everything else 
rests?
  Many people across the country will express their knowledge of the 
First Amendment, which as my friend, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. 
Roy), has stated, the Founders should have stopped with ``Congress 
shall make no law.'' Just stop right there. Again, less is more.
  Whenever you ask somebody what the First Amendment protects or what 
the first right protected in the Constitution is, they will invariably 
say freedom of speech. I have almost never had anyone answer that 
question any differently when you ask them what the First Amendment 
protects or what the first right protected in the Constitution is. They 
will say freedom of speech. Of course, that is incorrect.
  The first right specifically protected in the Constitution, the first 
one enumerated in the Bill of Rights intended to protect the people 
from an oppressive Federal Government, is the freedom of religion. The 
Founders knew that the most basic, most fundamental, and most precious 
of rights is the freedom to worship or not to worship and the freedom 
to practice or not to practice our faith as we choose.
  You cannot separate America from our founding Judeo-Christian 
principles and a recognition of our supernatural creator, by whom and 
for whom we have our existence, our lives, our breath, and our very 
being. It is He, as our founding Declaration expresses, who has endowed 
us with the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of 
happiness.
  How can a party continue to call itself conservative if it no longer 
fights for absolute truth and natural law flowing from our creator?
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer protects 
innocent, precious life in the womb or looks the other way at the 
number one cause of death in this country, abortion, and funds it in 
policy, as some just voted to do today with the latest NDAA?
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer fights for 
Biblical morality, the traditional family, or the definition of 
marriage?
  In fact, I have said many times that almost everything that plagues 
our society and our country is a failure to follow God's design for 
morality, marriage, and the family.
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer fights for a 
commonsense, scientific definition of sex and gender and funds the 
LGBTQ agenda, as we have been doing for the past 4 years?
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer fights for 
the true equality of all and, instead, tolerates DEI and CRT, racist 
policies that we are funding?
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer fights for 
individual freedom, personal responsibility, and self-reliance, or if 
it no longer places a premium on work or believes that people have a 
responsibility to provide for themselves, but instead, the party funds 
government dependence and generational poverty?
  How can a party call itself conservative if it no longer fights for 
limited government, reduced spending, or fiscal responsibility and 
instead borrows and funds massive deficits?

  I often speak in my district about the little-known and little-
regarded Ninth and 10th Amendments to the Constitution. When you ask a 
group what the Ninth and 10th Amendments are, almost no one knows what 
those amendments are.
  The Ninth Amendment says: ``The enumeration in the Constitution, of 
certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others 
retained by the people.''
  What that means is we have every right that the Constitution doesn't 
prohibit to us. We retain all the others. Just because the Founders 
listed some rights doesn't mean we don't keep every other right.
  The 10th Amendment says: ``The powers not delegated to the United 
States,'' or the Federal Government, ``by the Constitution, nor 
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States 
respectively, or the people.''
  What the Founders were saying, of course, is the Federal Government 
had limited power, and everything else was supposed to be left to the 
people or the States.
  Almost everything we do in this body is unconstitutional and violates 
the Ninth and the 10th Amendments. We have strayed so far from these 
constitutional limits, as so many Republicans have embraced expanded 
Federal power, the growth of government, more spending, and diminished 
freedom for the individual.
  We consistently reduce the rights or freedoms of the people. We 
regularly

[[Page H7107]]

seize from the States and the people the power that should be left to 
them.
  Again, it is all about the money. It is all about the purse strings 
that are entrusted specifically to this body.
  We are in danger of fulfilling the famous quote attributed to 
Alexander Fraser Tytler. He said this a couple of hundred years ago:

       A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. 
     It can only exist until the voters discover that they can 
     vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that 
     moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates 
     promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with 
     the result that a democracy always collapses over loose 
     fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship.

                              {time}  1745

  ``The average age of the world's greatest civilizations has been 200 
years. These nations have progressed through this sequence: From 
bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from 
courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to 
selfishness, from selfishness to apathy, from apathy to dependence, 
from dependence back into bondage.''
  May we determine not to accelerate that on our watch, not to let this 
happen on our watch. May we determine to leave those who come behind us 
a better America than we found it. May we determine to leave Congress 
having truly made a difference.
  Mr. Speaker, once again, I thank the citizens of Virginia's Fifth 
District for the privilege of representing them in Congress, and I 
yield back the balance of my time.

                          ____________________