[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 39 (Thursday, February 27, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1413-S1419]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                          LEGISLATIVE SESSION

                                 ______
                                 

  PROVIDING FOR CONGRESSIONAL DISAPPROVAL UNDER CHAPTER 8 OF TITLE 5, 
    UNITED STATES CODE, OF THE RULE SUBMITTED BY THE ENVIRONMENTAL 
 PROTECTION AGENCY RELATING TO ``WASTE EMISSIONS CHARGE FOR PETROLEUM 
   AND NATURAL GAS SYSTEMS: PROCEDURES FOR FACILITATING COMPLIANCE, 
              INCLUDING NETTING AND EXEMPTIONS''--Resumed

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
Senate will resume consideration of the following joint resolution, 
which the clerk will report.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A joint resolution (S.J. Res. 12) providing for 
     congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United 
     States Code, of the rule submitted by the Environmental 
     Protection Agency relating to ``Waste Emissions Charge for 
     Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems: Procedures for 
     Facilitating Compliance, Including Netting and Exemptions''.


                   Recognition of the Minority Leader

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Democratic leader is 
recognized.


                  Department of Government Efficiency

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, when Donald Trump and DOGE began their 
work, they kept saying the same thing. Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and 
DOGE said: This is about cutting waste; it is about efficiency; it is 
about meritocracy. Unfortunately, the truth has not been as advertised. 
It has been utter chaos.
  Yesterday, the Department of Veterans Affairs said they were 
reversing course on canceling billions of dollars in contract work 
because, as it turns out, slashing billions in funding that helps 
veterans is extremely harmful for veterans. These VA cuts were lauded 
by DOGE as an example of eliminating waste. The VA Secretary claimed 
these contracts were for consultants ``to make PowerPoint slides and 
write meeting minutes.'' That is not even close to the truth.
  Let me read some examples of what DOGE was actually prepared to cut: 
Funding for chemotherapy and imaging services, those were going to be 
cut--hardly make-work, hardly writing meeting minutes. Funding for 
veterans with disabilities--cut--even funding to help veterans 
suffering from toxic exposure in burn pits. One contract would help 
over 20,000 veterans track down their military service records from DOD 
in order to prove their toxic exposure, as is required. Without these 
records, getting affordable treatment would not likely be possible, and 
DOGE said: Let's cut that, too.
  Even if the VA reverses course, canceling these contracts and firing 
VA staff is still immediately damaging--very damaging. There is the 
risk that you can't rehire workers back in time because they have moved 
on to other jobs or contracts aren't available because they took their 
business elsewhere, and, by then, the damage is

[[Page S1414]]

done. Vital services and operations that serve veterans can't continue 
as before. It could take months--maybe even years--to build this back, 
which had been built up carefully to help veterans over the years, and 
many of us in Congress worked for those things; so to cut these 
services and then say ``never mind'' still ends up being very 
destructive. Sadly, this is only one example.
  Yesterday, Elon Musk led his first Cabinet meeting of this 
administration. He admitted that DOGE's approach has led to many 
erroneous cuts to staff and programs that are not wasteful but, on the 
contrary, vital.
  For example, he said:

       With USAID, one of the things we accidentally cancelled 
     very briefly was Ebola prevention.

  Those are his words.
  Are you kidding me? Cutting funds to stop one of the deadliest 
diseases in the world is reckless, especially when there is an Ebola 
outbreak in Uganda as we speak, and flights leave Kampala every day and 
go all over the world. When epidemics hit America, they oftentimes 
begin abroad, and U.S. funding is essential to prevent those diseases 
from reaching us here at all.
  I should also note that the claims that Ebola funding is back online 
are false. Reports are out from last night that 95 percent of all USAID 
funding is now being cut. So we are not sure where it all is.
  What DOGE is doing is not what efficiency looks like. If DOGE 
actually cares about efficiency and meritocracy, then it is failing, in 
many ways, its own test. It would be better to look at these programs, 
see which might be wasteful, see which are needed, and then make the 
cuts to the wasteful programs, not take a meat-ax or a blowtorch--call 
it what you will--cut everything, and then say we will restore some of 
the things that we shouldn't have cut, because once you make those 
cuts, it is very hard to put the pieces back together.


                                 Taxes

  Mr. President, on Republican taxes, last month, consumer confidence 
took its biggest nosedive in 4 years--the biggest nosedive in 4 years. 
This is how confident consumers, average Americans, feel about the 
economy. Inflation is trending back up. The price of eggs is sky high. 
The threat of a trade war looms over our country, and Americans are 
fearful that things are not going to get any better anytime soon. And 
what are Republicans doing about all of this? They are trying to cut 
taxes for billionaires--trying to cut taxes for billionaires--and make 
the American people pay for it.

  The Republican agenda is quickly taking shape. Under Donald Trump's 
Republican Party, billionaires win; American families lose.
  It doesn't matter if Republicans go with 1 bill or 2 bills or 50 
bills. That is what they are debating right now. Their endgame--House 
and Senate Republicans--has always been cutting taxes for billionaires 
and forcing American families to pick up the tab.
  Of course, Senate Republicans know that cutting Medicaid by over $800 
billion to lower taxes for billionaires is wildly unpopular. They know 
that increasing the deficit by up to $5 trillion to help the ultrarich 
contradicts everything the so-called party of fiscal responsibility 
stands for. They say they have to cut all this stuff to reduce the 
deficit, and then, with their tax breaks for billionaires, they 
increase the deficit, no matter what sleight-of-hand accounting method 
they use.
  What are Republicans doing about fiscal responsibility? Are they 
admitting that their plans would be a disaster for the deficit? No. 
Instead, Senate Republicans are engaged in budgetary hocus-pocus to 
hide the true cost of their tax cuts for the ultrarich, and there may 
be signs that House Republicans are going along.
  Instead of admitting the truth about the consequences of their plans, 
they are pursuing a gimmick called ``current policy baseline''--a 
gimmick, if there ever was one--which is essentially an attempt to 
magically turn $5 trillion of deficit spending into zero dollars of 
deficit spending. Well, that can't happen and doesn't happen, and the 
economy will realize it doesn't happen. Any junior high school math 
student could tell you this is a bunch of bunk. You can't pass $5 
trillion to cut taxes for the rich and pretend like it doesn't affect 
the deficit.
  The issue isn't complicated. Republicans are trying to hide the true 
cost of their billionaire tax cuts from the American people. Meanwhile, 
they are getting ready to eviscerate funding for healthcare that serves 
over 80 million Americans--kids, seniors, rural communities. These cuts 
to Medicaid will dramatically hurt rural America, people with 
disabilities, and more.
  The only people who seem to be opposing this is the hard-right 
Freedom Caucus, because they seem to really care about the deficit. 
Let's hope they stay strong for the sake of the economy and this 
country.
  Of course, the American people are not going to take these Medicaid 
cuts lying down.
  Last night, I got on a Zoom. Over 3,000 New Yorkers, worried about 
the attacks from Republicans on healthcare, got on the Zoom, many more 
than we expected. These were rank-and-file folks, healthcare advocates, 
union members, and concerned citizens from all walks of life. They were 
all upset about the cuts to Medicaid and putting those cuts in place in 
order to give tax breaks for billionaires.
  It was a great call. It was an energizing call. I urge my colleagues 
to do the same, as many of them are. It is a stark reminder of what is 
at stake but also a reminder that the American people don't like these 
cuts.
  We heard from New Yorkers who are in danger of having their Medicaid 
coverage taken away if Republicans proceed with their actions, on this 
Zoom of over 3,000 people. But we also talked about taking action.
  I urged participants to call their Members of Congress. I urged them 
to mobilize online and to organize in their communities. We urged 
everyone to make their voices heard, like we are seeing in the townhall 
meetings.
  I reminded folks that organizing is not easy, but it works. It 
changes things, and it is going to make a difference in making sure 
Medicaid is protected.


                      Nomination of Linda McMahon

  Mr. President, on our Education Secretary nominee, today, the Senate 
will vote on whether to advance the nomination of Linda McMahon as 
Secretary of Education.
  Mrs. McMahon's nomination comes as President Trump has been clear 
about cutting funding for education and abolishing the Department of 
Education entirely.
  Is Mrs. McMahon going to go along? I hope not.
  Cutting education is not what the American people want. The American 
people don't want a radical, out-of-touch billionaire slashing funding 
for public schools. When you slash Federal funding for education, guess 
what happens. Since so many of our school districts--urban, suburban, 
rural--depend on this Federal money, it leads to higher property taxes 
for people back home.
  If you eliminate the Department of Education as a whole, that means 
local communities are forced to pick up the tab to fund the schools. It 
means that families in these communities will pay in the form of higher 
property taxes to make up the loss of Federal funding. But communities 
will also be forced to slash other programs to make room for funding 
for schools.
  Again, this is not what the American people want. This is not what 
they voted for.
  Mrs. McMahon, in my judgment, is not qualified to lead America's 
public education. She seems not to care very much about it. But that is 
precisely why President Trump nominated her. She is the perfect choice 
to bring our public education system burning to the ground.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. THUNE. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call 
be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                   Recognition of the Majority Leader

  The majority leader is recognized.


                                 Energy

  Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, this week, the Senate is focused on 
unleashing American energy. As I have

[[Page S1415]]

said before, our country is facing some serious energy challenges. We 
need more power, or we face the possibility of a future defined by 
unreliable and unaffordable energy, which is why President Trump 
declared an energy emergency on his first day in office--to produce 
more energy, build more infrastructure, and ultimately bring energy 
prices down.
  But our Democrat colleagues made it clear, yesterday, they don't 
believe such an emergency exists. The Senator from Virginia called it a 
``sham.'' Our colleague from New Hampshire said it was ``an emergency 
declaration in search of an emergency.''
  Every Senate Democrat voted to deny the emergency that our country 
faces. I guess they haven't seen the reports of the precarious state of 
American energy.
  Last year, a Washington Post headline read:

       Amid explosive demand, America is running out of power.

  A recent report from the North American Electric Reliability 
Corporation warns of ``mounting resource adequacy challenges'' in the 
next decade.
  Whether Democrats want to acknowledge it or not, the signs of a 
rapidly approaching energy crisis are clear. There is a threat of 
blackouts, not enough power to meet demand, heightened prices for gas 
and utilities. Apparently, Democrats don't think these are cause for 
alarm. But whether they are willing to acknowledge it or not--and 
yesterday's vote, I think, made clear that they are not--we have a 
serious problem, and if we don't do something about it, we face a 
future with an unreliable and unaffordable energy supply.
  Republicans are taking action. This week, the Senate is working to 
prevent two of the Biden administration's anti-energy policies from 
going into effect.
  On Tuesday, the Senate passed Senator Kennedy's resolution to stop 
the Biden administration's marine archeology rule. Offshore oil and gas 
producers have long been required to submit an archeological report 
before drilling if their project area was thought to include things 
like shipwrecks, settlements, or other archeological sites. But last 
year, the Biden administration decided to require archeological reports 
for all offshore projects, even when there is nothing to suggest the 
project will be near an archeological site. It is just another way to 
slow down production and heap more costs on producers--costs that 
consumers eventually pay. And it is another part of the Biden 
administration's efforts to close off America's waters to conventional 
energy production.
  Under President Biden, offshore permits dropped to a two-decade low. 
The administration's offshore leasing plan included only 3 possible 
leases, down from 47 in an earlier draft from the first Trump 
administration.
  And, of course, there was President Biden's last-minute ban on oil 
and gas production in 625 million acres of America's waters. Why we 
would so severely limit the use of our natural resources is beyond me. 
Under Republican leadership, we will be leveraging assets to restore 
American energy dominance.
  Later today, the Senate will also vote on a resolution to block the 
$6 billion natural gas tax that was included in the Democrats' so-
called Inflation Reduction Act. This tax would increase costs for 
energy producers and limit energy production, leading to higher utility 
bills for many Americans.
  Under the Biden administration's implementation of this tax, it would 
hit smaller operations the hardest. On top of that, the tax puts tens 
of thousands of jobs at risk, including in natural gas-rich States like 
Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Texas, and North Dakota.
  The Senate will vote later today to stop implementation of this tax 
on energy producers. I appreciate Senator Hoeven's leadership on this 
issue. Thanks in substantial part to his efforts, energy producers will 
not have to worry about this unnecessary natural gas tax, and the 
American people won't have to worry about it driving up their utility 
bills.
  It would be nice if Democrats would join us in our efforts, if not to 
avoid our rapidly approaching energy crisis, at least to promote more 
affordable prices for Americans. I have recently been hearing our 
Democrat colleagues express newfound interest fighting inflation. If 
they are serious about that, they should be joining us in blocking 
these anti-energy policies that are driving prices up.
  But with Democrats or without, Republicans will keep working to build 
a more secure and more affordable energy future.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Electric Vehicles

  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, before coming to the floor each day, I 
try to make sure I go through the morning newspapers, and today I found 
in the Washington Post an interesting column: ``Multi-car pileup as 
electric vehicles collide with reality.''
  ``Multi-car pileup as electric vehicles collide with reality.''
  And the reality is the Democrat electric vehicle mandate is a 
failure. It failed the American people, failed the taxpayers, and just 
plain failed.
  For years, President Biden and Democrats tried to force Americans to 
buy electric vehicles. They tried to do it by banning gas-powered cars. 
They tried to do it by bribing people with taxpayer subsidies.
  President Trump has, rightly, promised to pull the plug on Joe 
Biden's unpopular electric vehicle mandate. People are delighted. 
President Trump fulfilled that promise on day one in office. He ended 
the Biden ban on gas-powered vehicles. In my home State of Wyoming and 
the Presiding Officer's home State of Montana, that is welcome relief.
  The next step is for Congress, for this body, to end the subsidies on 
electric vehicles, and I have introduced legislation to do just that. 
My bill ends the $7,500 subsidy for EVs. It also closes the Biden 
loophole that funnels taxpayer moneys, believe it or not, to communist 
China. Finally, it ends the subsidies for the EV charging stations.
  The EV subsidies were, in essence, a Biden giveaway. He wanted to 
give money away to the coastal elites who drive electric vehicles, and 
it was connected to Biden's unpopular climate dreams.
  The aggressive push for EVs began with Democrats' reckless tax-and-
spending bill. It included a $7,500 handout for anyone who bought an 
electric vehicle, while not a single Republican in the House or Senate 
voted for that reckless tax-and-spending bill.
  The Joint Committee on Taxation looked at the cost of these EV 
subsidies because there was going to be a mandate attached; you were 
going to have to buy an electric vehicle at some point or other. So 
originally they said it might cost $14 billion. That is a lot of money. 
When they redid the math a year later, they said the cost estimated 
would be $100 billion. Outside analysts estimated the cost even higher. 
Goldman Sachs said that the EV subsidies could cost taxpayers as much 
as $394 billion, which is 28 times as much as the original thought that 
it would be when the Joint Committee on Taxation looked at it.
  These subsidies--this is for a vehicle that most Americans can't 
afford, don't want, and doesn't work for them. It doesn't work in my 
home State of Wyoming. It doesn't work in the Presiding Officer's home 
State of Montana. Most Americans know that EVs are luxury items with 
severe limitations. They certainly can't be the primary source of 
transportation for most Americans.
  The average cost of an EV: $62,000. Well, that is $16,000 more than 
the cost of most gas-powered vehicles. The dealers I have talked to in 
my home State of Wyoming tell me that it takes significantly longer to 
sell an EV than a gas-powered vehicle. And the EVs that they are able 
to sell, they end up selling for a loss. The nationwide sales of EVs is 
also stalling. They actually lost market share in 2024.
  Despite endless subsidies, EVs account for less than 10 percent of 
all car sales in America. Most of these are sold to wealthier 
Americans, people who don't need a subsidy from the government to begin 
with. This is social engineering to benefit the liberal elite. It is

[[Page S1416]]

a transfer of money from hard-working American families to the wealthy.
  Every time a wealthy liberal in San Francisco gets a government 
subsidy when they go and buy an electric car, a working-class family in 
Sheridan, WY, ends up paying in their taxes.
  My legislation ends all of that. EVs are a bad investment for 
American people and for American automakers. This month, Ford projected 
that, in 2025, it would lose over $5.5 billion on its electric 
vehicles. In 2024, Ford sold only 21,000 EVs. It lost $5 billion. That 
is a loss of $60,000 for each and every electric vehicle that they were 
able to sell. Now, Ford isn't alone. Major car companies--General 
Motors and others--are also losing money on EVs.
  The transition to EVs is also estimated to kill hundreds of thousands 
of jobs, including in the Midwest, manufacturing jobs of gas-powered 
vehicles. It is already sending thousands of American workers from the 
assembly line to the unemployment line.
  Ending subsidies for EVs is about saving taxpayer money, protecting 
American jobs, but it is also about protecting our national security. 
Initially, only EVs made in America were supposed to be eligible for 
this $7,500 subsidy. But before leaving office, Joe Biden made it 
easier for those tax credits on EVs to go for those made with parts 
from China. It wasn't supposed to happen that way, but Biden and the 
Democrats, so desperate to force EVs onto the American public, they 
created a leasing loophole specifically designed to help China.
  This is how it works. It allows customers who lease EVs instead of 
buying them--but who lease EVs--made with Chinese parts, they could 
still fully receive the subsidy. Well, since 80 percent of the EV 
batteries come from China, they had noted a major problem because they 
weren't going to be able to get the subsidies. That is why they came up 
with this leasing loophole.
  Because in 2022, before they had the loophole, only 7 percent of new 
EVs were leased. Because of this Biden gimmick, that number jumped to 
45 percent--almost half of all the EVs in America then being leased 
rather than bought.
  The American taxpayers are subsidizing technologies controlled by 
communist China. It is wrong. My bill ends that.
  Republicans are focused on what matters: lowering prices, unleashing 
American energy, creating American jobs, and putting Americans back in 
the driver's seat.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Mullin). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                              H.J. Res. 35

  Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I am here today in opposition to the 
measure that we are about to vote on, which would undo a rule that 
regulates the release of methane into the atmosphere.
  Let's just start with the most basic simple proposition that methane 
is dangerous, it is poisonous, it is explosive. And for those reasons 
alone, it is something that the fossil fuel industry should not be 
leaking. The fossil fuel industry should be responsible about taking 
care of its leaks of a gas that is dangerous, poisonous, and explosive.
  But in addition to that immediate danger, methane is also a really, 
really potent greenhouse gas. If you look at the effect over a 20-year 
period, methane in the atmosphere is 80 times--8-0--times more 
dangerous than carbon dioxide. So we talk all the time about carbon 
emissions, carbon limits, carbon pollution. Methane is actually 80 
times more dangerous.
  So there are two reasons why the fossil fuel industry should not be 
leaking large amounts of methane. First, it is dangerous, poisonous, 
and explosive. And, second, it is an 80 times worse greenhouse gas than 
carbon dioxide over a 20-year period.
  So how much methane is industry leaking, and why did we do this 
measure in the first place?
  Well, industry told the EPA for years that it was leaking about 8 
million tons--8 million tons--of methane, which all by itself is a 
pretty big number, but it turned out that the industry was not telling 
the EPA the truth.
  It turns out that once independent sources got a chance to spot 
methane leaks using, for instance, satellites--this is a satellite 
image of a methane plume that is being released from a leak site--when 
they could find that--and satellites can now do that so we are 
beginning to know how much methane is actually being leaked and 
particularly when you backstop the satellite information with 
information from aircraft where the readings can be more sensitive than 
from a satellite--it turns out that what they were actually leaking was 
more like 32 million tons. They were only disclosing a quarter of what 
they were leaking, and even that 8 million that they disclosed was a 
pretty bad number. When you go to 32 million tons, that is a great deal 
of leakage of a gas that is dangerous, poisonous, explosive, and 80 
times more powerful a greenhouse gas over a 20-year period than carbon 
dioxide.
  Now, you would think that, as an attribute of basic human decency, 
these companies that are leaking methane would go and clean it up. It 
is the decent thing to do, but they didn't, obviously. They didn't even 
disclose truthfully and accurately what they were leaking. So, when we 
were confronted with a 32-million-ton annual leak of poisonous, 
dangerous, explosive methane, and its greenhouse effects on top of 
that, we tried to do something about it.
  So what did we do?
  Well, we did two things: a little bit of carrot, a little bit of 
stick.
  The carrot was $1.5 billion--1.5 billion taxpayer dollars--in flatout 
corporate welfare to the leaking oil and gas companies so that they 
could use taxpayer money to clean up the mess they were making to deal 
with the pipes and the valves and the wells that they weren't properly 
maintaining and that were leaking, it turned out, 32 million tons of 
methane.
  Now, one could argue that that was a pretty poor use of taxpayer 
money; that a basic tenet of corporate responsibility should be: You 
clean up your own mess. You take care of your own equipment. That is a 
basic tenet of human responsibility. I don't know why it shouldn't be a 
basic tenet of corporate responsibility, but the measurement of 32 
million tons of leakage shows that, obviously, those companies were not 
meeting that basic corporate tenet of responsibility.
  So along comes the $1.5 billion of free taxpayer money--corporate 
welfare--to polluters and leakers for taxpayers to pay them to clean up 
the problem that they were causing. I didn't love that, to tell you the 
truth, but it came with an incentive as well, and the incentive was, if 
you are still leaking methane after a certain period and if you are 
still leaking methane above a certain level--you had to be a big leaker 
yourself. It had to be a big leak, like 300 tons per leak, and you had 
to be in the worst sector of the oil and gas industry. If those things 
were true--if you had big leaks and you were a big leaker and you were 
in the worst performing sector of your industry--then you would be 
assessed a fee for the leakage, which would be an incentive, in 
addition to the free $1.5 billion the industry got to go out there and 
fix the darned pipes and valves and wells and stop the leaking.
  What we are doing today is saying to this industry: You can keep the 
$1.5 billion. We gave you that whether you used it to clean up or not. 
I don't know that. I don't think the jury is back on that, but they did 
get the $1.5 billion. But the part where you have to pay if you are 
still polluting, after all of this, beyond industry standards--that is 
what we are stripping out today. This Congressional Review Act measure 
specifically helps the segment of the oil and gas industry that is not 
even meeting oil and gas industry standards for controlling leaks.
  I think it is a pretty reasonable test to impose on industry leakers 
that they at least meet their own industry standard for leaking. This 
isn't some arbitrary standard that government has imposed. This isn't 
something that came out of the Green New Deal. This is the industry's 
own standard for responsibility about leaks, and you pay this fee if 
you don't meet your own industry standard for taking care of your 
equipment properly and avoiding leaks of a dangerous, explosive, 
poisonous

[[Page S1417]]

greenhouse gas 80 times more dangerous than carbon dioxide.
  So that is where we are, and that is where we are at today. Today's 
vote only protects those worst industry performers who have not cleaned 
up their act and met their own industry standards. If there were ever 
an undeserving group for Congress's solicitude, that is the group. They 
are not even meeting their own industry standards. They are comfortable 
with dangerous levels of leakage beyond what even their own industry 
recommends as a standard, and on they go.

  This is just a little bit of a piece with the recent designation by 
the Trump administration of what ``energy'' is. The Trump 
administration just put out a definition of ``energy'' that doesn't 
include solar or wind. Most of what came online and is slated to come 
online in 2025 has been solar and wind. It is the booming part of our 
energy economy. It is where the growth is and the jobs are and the 
innovation is. It is also a leading energy source in red States. If you 
look at who is best on solar and who is best on wind, you see States 
like Texas; you see Iowa; you see Wyoming. They have considerable 
investments in solar and wind, but the Trump administration won't even 
call solar and wind energy.
  So we are in this bizarre circumstance in which the fossil fuel 
industry, which drives so much behavior in this body after $100 million 
spent on the Trump campaign that we know of--probably hundreds of 
millions more secretly--has gained two big things: one, a completely 
false definition of ``solar energy'' and ``wind energy'' as not being 
energy despite the fact that it is fully operational, producing 
electrons, and was the largest source of new additions to the grid for 
2025, and they just decree: This is not energy.
  Why the fossil fuel industry would want that is a pretty strong 
signal of how low that industry will go in using its power over 
Congress. They will basically press the Trump administration to claim 
that solar energy and wind energy aren't even energy. It is a 
spectacularly foolish and false proposition, but bending the knee to 
the wishes of the fossil fuel industry appears to have no limits.
  This vote is the second expression of that subservience to fossil 
fuel because of all the things that you could do, of all the things 
that would help grow America's energy markets, of all the things you 
could do to help take care of people who live near energy facilities or 
people who are being subjected to harm from climate change--of all the 
things you could do, probably the worst one would be to take the worst 
performers at leaking, which shouldn't happen in the first place, who 
leak so badly they don't even meet their own industry standards, who 
for years have been falsely saying that they leaked only a quarter of 
what they have actually been leaking, and they are the people whom we 
are going to come to the rescue of.
  They had two choices here so that they didn't have to pay the fee for 
being among the worst leakers and not meeting their own industry 
standards. One is, clean up your darned equipment. Fix your pipes. Fix 
your valves. Fix your wells. Stop the leaking or at least reduce it to 
your own industry standard. If you do that, you don't pay this fee--or 
come to Congress. Use your power, the force of your dark money, of your 
influence, of your super PACs, of your political control, and get that 
requirement removed so that you can continue to leak, continue to leak 
methane--a dangerous, explosive, and poisonous substance--into your 
communities, continue to add this far more dangerous greenhouse gas to 
the atmosphere, and continue to meet no reasonable standard of 
corporate responsibility for taking care of your own gear and quitting 
the leaking.
  And you know what they chose; they chose to come here and get a free 
pass--a hall pass from Republicans in Congress, a hall pass from the 
Trump administration--so that they can continue to leak to their hearts 
content, never mind their culpability of not meeting their own industry 
standards, never mind the harm that it causes.
  This is an industry that lives off a pollute-for-free business model. 
If this industry were not allowed to pollute for free--if it had to 
compete, head-to-head, with hydro, geothermal, solar, wind, without the 
free right to pollute--we would have a very different energy mix, and 
they know that. So they insist on protecting their right to pollute for 
free, but of all the little quadrants of the industry whose pollution-
for-free we should be coming to the floor to defend, those worst 
leakers who aren't taking care of their own equipment even to industry 
standards are at the bottom of any reasonable person's priority list, 
and yet they are the ones we are here to serve today.
  The backdrop to this is, of course, ``climate change,'' a term that 
the fossil fuel industry has so ingratiated itself with the Trump 
administration that it is able to excise the term--a language attack--
excise the term from official documents, a little bit like saying that 
``energy'' is everything except solar and wind. That is obviously 
false--provably false, in fact, and a preposterous assertion--but when 
serving the fossil fuel industry, that is the stuff they make you do, 
and here you go with saying that climate change isn't real when Exxon 
scientists talked about its being real 30 years ago. We are driving 
down a path of polluter-funded falsehood that ends in very dangerous 
places.

  We have a pretty good idea of where it ends because scientists have 
been telling us where this goes for decades now, scientists in our 
major universities. I do not believe that there is a single State 
university, a State university with the name of the State in its name--
University of Rhode Island, for instance. I don't think there is a 
single State university in this country that does not teach climate 
change. That is how well-established climate change is as a factual 
proposition, and what it is going to do has been known for a long, long 
time.
  The predictions are astonishingly accurate. Here in the Senate, we 
heard all those predictions. The first hearing on those warnings was 
actually by Republican Senator John Chafee of Rhode Island in his role 
then as chairman of the Environmental Public Works Committee. He had a 
senior scientist from NASA, John Hanson, come over and describe what 
the science was, what we knew about what was going on.
  So there is a long, clear, indisputable scientific record warning us 
of what is coming--preview of coming attractions.
  But then it came here, and, here, the fossil fuel industry butted in 
with enormous political force, turbocharged after the Citizens United 
decision allowed that industry to spend unlimited amounts of money. And 
in the enforcement--or nonenforcement--of that decision, allowed that 
industry to spend those unlimited amounts of money secretly from behind 
front groups and through Super PACs and from other devices where the 
public was denied the knowledge of who was trying to influence them. 
The basic right of citizenship is to know who is doing what to whom on 
the field of politics American citizens are supposed to police with 
their votes. That knowledge was denied them, and that flood of industry 
pressure came into this Chamber. And before you knew it, climate change 
was suddenly a partisan issue. If you wanted to be a Republican, you 
had to deny climate change. It was pretty much as simple as that.
  Ask Bob Inglis from the House of Representatives what happened if you 
tried to break that grip of the fossil fuel industry on the House 
leadership, the fossil fuel industry grip on the House leadership on 
the Republican side.
  So the science was right all along. We failed at the politics because 
of improper fossil fuel industry influence, probably the most maligned 
and large-scale political influence campaign in American history. We 
yielded to it. We allowed ourselves to not heed the warnings and take 
the steps that would have put us on a pathway to safety.
  Now, having heard the scientific warnings, having failed at taking 
appropriate safety steps, we are now entering the third era, the era of 
consequences, when the stuff starts to hit the fan. And the warnings 
are coming from all over.
  Just about 2 weeks ago, the chair of the Federal Reserve testified to 
the Senate Banking Committee that in 10 to 15 years, it will be 
impossible to get a mortgage in entire regions of the country. How does 
that relate to climate change? That relates to climate change because 
climate change is creating changes in weather patterns that

[[Page S1418]]

make it impossible for the insurance industry to predict risk. That is 
why insurance rates are quadruple the national average in Florida, 
which is first and worst into this insurance crisis because of its 
storm and flooding risk, because it is on the path of so many 
hurricanes, because the Gulf of Mexico is warming so fast that it is 
powering worse storms, more heavily ladened storms, with rain onto 
Florida's coasts. And when you can't get insurance on your home, and 
you go to sell it, you have got a problem because the buyer can't get a 
mortgage if your home is uninsurable.
  What the chief economists of Freddie Mac warned, the mortgage giant, 
is that the climate risk creates an insurance crisis, which rolls over 
into a mortgage crisis, which drives down property values so badly that 
it creates a 2008-style national economic crisis.
  Those aren't the only warnings. Reinsurers look at this climate mess 
as a business proposition. The insurance industry has to get the future 
right in order to do its business, and it knows that what the fossil 
fuel industry is saying about what is going to happen in the future is 
a whole pack of lies. So they are raising their rates. The reinsurance 
companies are looking and saying, wow, this is getting way more 
dangerous. We are not going to reinsure without getting a lot more 
money.
  Reinsurance rates have more than doubled since 2017. They were up as 
much as 40 percent in 2023 alone in some markets.
  So it is not just the voice of the Fed; it is not just the voice of 
the chief economists of Freddie Mac; it is the reinsurance industry.
  Go below the reinsurance industry to the insurance industry and look 
at the first and worst place, Florida. All the major insurers are out--
pulled the plug. Gone. Done. Pop-up insurers have come to fill the gap. 
Twelve to fifteen of them have gone bankrupt already. And when they go 
bankrupt, they don't pay claims, and Floridians are left stuck behind 
an insurer that was not solvent.
  Florida has had to stand up its own homeowners insurance company, 
which now has a huge share of the market and an even bigger share of 
the risk because they have allowed the other insurers to come in and 
cherry-pick out the lowest risk properties. So Florida is carrying a 
liability right now on homeowner's insurance that is greater than its 
entire State debt.
  If you want to look at the solvency of a State, look at what 
Florida's risk is for its property insurance companies, citizens' 
property insurance, and its backup fund that comes in when the pop-up 
insurance companies go bust and somebody else has to come in and pay 
the claims.
  The insurance industry, which has to look accurately at the future is 
also telling us this is deadly, deadly serious.
  There is an international Financial Stability Board whose job is to 
look at the world banking industry, the world banking sector, and warn 
of risks to the banking sector. They just put out a comprehensive 
report on the danger that climate change poses to the banking sector.
  It comes in a couple of ways. One is the one I just described. When 
banks can't issue mortgages, they lose a huge revenue proposition. So 
they get hurt in the ``insurance to mortgage to market value to 
economic crash'' cascade.
  But, also, as those values fall--let's say you went from carrying a 
$4,000 carrying cost for your property insurance to a $20,000 carrying 
cost. The present value of $20,000 every year into the future as long 
as you are going to own that home, diminishes the value of that home. 
It doesn't just diminish it for you and for the next buyer, it 
diminishes it for the bank that holds your mortgage. It is really 
important to banks that they have enough collateral to back their loan. 
Their loan-to-value ratio is what helps determine their solvency. So 
the International Financial Stability Board is warning banks around the 
world: Look out. The climate crisis is coming at you and for your 
solvency.
  This was, perhaps, said best by The Economist magazine in April, 
which led with a cover article warning of the next housing disaster and 
saying that ``the severe weather brought about by greenhouse-gas 
emissions is shaking the foundations of the world's most important 
asset class''--real estate.
  The number that they put to that risk that is shaking the foundations 
of the world's largest asset class is $25 trillion. A $25 trillion hit 
to the world's largest asset class.
  In the United States, a new report by First Street, which is a 
technical firm that looks at flooding risk for a whole variety of 
corporate clients but also publishes as well--they just published a 
report that climate change could erase $1.4 trillion in real estate 
value by 2055--i.e., in the 30-year mortgage period--a $1.4 trillion 
hit to real estate values here in the United States. While $25 trillion 
dollars was The Economist's global number; First Street's is $1.4 
trillion here in the United States.
  Trillions are big, big numbers. And when it is hitting people in 
their most prized and valuable family asset--their homes--it is a very, 
very dangerous proposition.
  Here is what The Economist said:

       The impending bill--

  For climate harms--

       is so huge, in fact, it will have grim implications not 
     just for personal prosperity--

  i.e., the homeowner--

       but also for the financial system.

  Hence the report from the International Financial Stability Board 
about the need to shore up the international financial system.
  Here is how it goes down, they say:

       If the size of the risk suddenly sinks in, and borrowers 
     and lenders alike realize the collateral underpinning so many 
     transactions is not worth as much as they thought, a wave of 
     repricing will reverberate through financial markets.

  Punch line:

       Climate change, in short, could prompt the next global 
     property crash.

  Instead of dealing with this--even as Americans are already seeing 
their property insurance prices rise and double, are getting more and 
more nonrenewal notices to get them off the company--what are we doing? 
We are helping out the absolutely worst offenders at climate leakage.
  Here is Deloitte. I will close with this. Deloitte is a corporate 
consultancy. This is not Green New Deal. This is a corporate 
consultancy:

       If we allow climate change to go unchecked, it will ravage 
     our global economy. For the United States, the damages to 
     2070--

  Which was their prediction date--

       are projected to reach $14.5 trillion, a lifetime loss of 
     nearly $70,000 for each working American.

  And we are not even talking about that seriously. We are here, 
instead, to let off the hook that segment of the oil and gas industry 
that is the worst polluters, that doesn't even meet their own industry 
standards, and that can get away from the fee that we will be voting 
down now by simply meeting industry standards. This is a shameful 
moment for the Senate.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Hagerty). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for a 
little more than a minute.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                              H.J. Res. 35

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, every American should be paying close 
attention to what is about to happen on the floor. In just a few 
moments, the Senate will vote on a Republican resolution that is 
straight from the wish list of Big Oil and Big Gas.
  Instead of spending floor time pushing legislation that will lower 
costs for American families, Republicans are bowing to Big Oil and Gas 
billionaires by trying to reverse the methane waste emissions charge 
which Democrats passed in the Inflation Reduction Act. Donald Trump and 
DOGE claim to care about efficiency, but Republicans are undoing a 
measure to reduce oil and gas waste and are making prices for the 
consumer go up--prices going up--when they are saying they want prices 
to go down. The rule we passed has been one of our most important tools 
to lower energy prices, to hold Big Oil and Big Gas accountable, to 
keep excessive and harmful levels of methane

[[Page S1419]]

out of our atmosphere, which my friend Mr. Whitehouse, who has done 
such a good job on this issue, tells me is 80 times as poisonous as 
CO2. Without this safeguard, Big Oil and Gas can waste as 
much natural gas as they like and then pass the cost on to consumers.
  Why are Republicans doing this? Well, it is simple. They are putting 
the needs of Big Oil and Gas companies over the needs of the American 
people, over the health of the American people and the health of our 
environment, our climate, our globe. And the consequences for the 
American people, for their health and their energy bills, are going to 
be very harmful.
  I urge my colleagues to think carefully, one last time, before voting 
to overturn it.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, all time has 
expired.
  The clerk will read the title of the joint resolution for the third 
time.
  The joint resolution was ordered to be engrossed for a third reading 
and was read the third time.

                          ____________________