[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 39 (Thursday, February 27, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Page S1441]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

  Ms. ALSOBROOKS. Mr. President, I would like to use my time to 
highlight the attacks currently being thrown at our Federal workers and 
the unconscionable firings that are taking place.
  We have heard baseless and callous criticisms of our Federal workers 
from this administration for weeks now. They are wrong, and much of 
what they are built on is a lie. And they are dehumanizing.
  This is, in fact, a witch hunt. Our civil servants are among the best 
of what our Nation has to offer. They serve with no political 
motivation. Many have served for years under Democratic administrations 
and Republican administrations. They have one dedication: to their 
fellow Americans. It is a patriotic calling that they have all 
answered. They are not faceless villains. They are real people with 
real stories.
  People like a woman I spoke with who has served at the Department of 
Health and Human Services for over 35 years, she has been put on leave 
as a part of the President's Executive orders. For her and people like 
her, to be caught up in these partisan attacks is infuriating.
  The administration claims to be doing this in the name of efficiency. 
There is nothing efficient about gaining unauthorized access to private 
data and then blindly firing 5,200 employees across multiple Agencies. 
There is nothing competent about cutting the workforce without any 
thought about how it would impact operations.
  This is not efficient. This is senseless, and this is heartless.
  NIH is based in my State of Maryland, and many of the workers there 
are among the 150,000 civil servants who call Maryland home. Each one 
of them has made a commitment to public service. Each one of them is a 
civil servant that I am proud to represent. These abrupt and improper 
firings have shaken up the lives of thousands of dedicated workers who 
do not deserve this treatment. And what makes this even worse is that 
attacking our Federal workers doesn't just hurt them; it hurts all 
Americans, the people who rely on government programs to keep them 
healthy and safe.
  These aren't hypothetical concerns. These firings will have real-
world consequences. Eliminating staff at NIH will delay the development 
and approval of lifesaving treatments. Cancer patients will have to 
wait longer for promising new treatments as clinical trials still stall 
due to staffing shortages. This will slowly eliminate research and 
medical intervention and weaken our standing in global biomedical 
science.
  Cuts to an already understaffed CMS workforce will hurt patient care. 
We will see disruptions in medically necessary care and delays in 
payments to hospitals and other healthcare providers. Firing staff at 
HHS will cripple our ability to quickly identify and respond to public 
health threats. And right now, we are experiencing the worst flu season 
in over 15 years, resulting in school closures in at least 10 States. 
We are monitoring an outbreak of Ebola in Uganda. We are keeping track 
of the growing threat of avian influenza.
  Without a strong workforce, we will not be able to react effectively. 
It is impossible to forget the significant role that NIH plays in 
developing and deploying vaccines and treatments. We are just beyond 
the clutches of the last major public health crisis. And without a 
strong workforce, we will not be prepared to face the next pandemic.
  In the clearest terms possible, these cuts aren't about efficiency. 
To the American people, it quite literally could be the difference 
between life and death. They are as direct a contradiction as you can 
have of the priorities this administration claimed to set when they 
took control--to ease burdens on families. Instead, these firings could 
add enormous strain to a nation that is already in need of relief. They 
are irresponsible, they are inefficient, and they are undeserved.
  What our civil servants deserve is a recognition of the work they do 
every day to make us stronger. What the American people deserve is for 
us to keep our obligation to ensure their health and their safety. I 
will continue to defend them and apply pressure to this administration 
until it happens.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin.

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