[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 20]
[Senate]
[Pages 26984-27061]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                         TAX RELIEF ACT OF 2005

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will now 
resume consideration of S. 2020.
  The clerk will report the bill by title.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A bill (S. 2020) to provide for reconciliation pursuant to 
     section 202(b) of the concurrent resolution on the budget for 
     the fiscal year 2006.

  Pending:

       Dorgan amendment No. 2587, to amend the Internal Revenue 
     Code of 1986 to impose a temporary windfall profit tax on 
     crude oil and to rebate the tax collected back to the 
     American consumer.
       Durbin amendment No. 2596, to express the sense of the 
     Senate concerning the provision of health care for children 
     before providing tax cuts for the wealthy.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, this morning we intend to continue two 
major amendments from this side of the aisle. The amendment of Senator 
Conrad from North Dakota proposes a fiscally responsible substitute; 
the amendment of the Senator from Washington, Ms. Cantwell, is 
regarding energy price gouging. These are both very important 
amendments and an important debate. I ask consent the pending 
amendments be temporarily laid aside so Senator Conrad may offer an 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2602

  (Purpose: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide tax 
benefits for areas affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma and 
     to extend certain expiring provisions, and for other purposes)

  Mr. CONRAD. Madam President, first I thank the ranking member on the 
Senate Committee on Finance, Senator Baucus, for his leadership and for 
the extraordinary amount of work he does to make the work of the 
Committee on Finance as responsible as it can be.
  There are many provisions in the underlying bill that has come out of 
the Committee on Finance that I support. I think they are broadly 
supported extensions of expiring tax provisions that ought to be 
extended.
  I salute the chairman of the Committee on Finance, Senator Grassley, 
for the good job he has done in putting together this package. While I 
agree with many of the specific provisions, I have one profound area of 
disagreement. That profound area of disagreement is that this package 
is not paid for. The result, if we pass this package, will be to deepen 
the deficit, to add to the debt, when we already have record deficits 
and we already have runaway debt.
  My colleagues are going to have to answer the question, Why shouldn't 
we pay for these tax provisions? Why shouldn't we cover the cost? Why 
shouldn't we prevent the deficit from being expanded? Why shouldn't we 
prevent the debt from being deepened?
  That is the question posed by my amendment. It takes many of the 
provisions in the Committee on Finance bill, the expiring tax 
provisions, and extends them for 1 year. It pays for them fully.
  It is very important to remember the history. How did we get in the 
position we are in today? My colleagues will remember this very famous 
chart that the administration and the Congressional Budget Office 
presented back in 2001. This part of the chart I call the fan chart 
showed the range of possible outcomes if we didn't change any budget 
policies. This range of possible outcomes from a best case scenario; to 
a median scenario, the midpoint between the range of possible outcomes 
is the prediction line adopted; to the worst case scenario. These were 
the projections given to us if we just did nothing.
  My colleagues on the other side said: No, this is too conservative, 
this range of possible outcomes. They said: Don't you understand, if we 
have tax cuts we will get more revenue so we will be above the midpoint 
of the range. We might be even above the best case scenario. The 
problem with that theory is that it did not work out in reality.
  Here is what happened in reality: This red line is far below the 
worst case scenario outlined by the Congressional Budget Office in 
2001. I have caught the chairman's attention. He will remember the 
chart very well from 2001, what the Congressional Budget Office said 
was the range of possible outcomes. The Congressional Budget Office 
adopted this midrange of the estimates as their projection.
  Many of my colleagues on the other side told me, when I said we 
shouldn't be betting on a 10-year forecast: Kent, you are way too 
conservative. Don't you understand if we cut taxes we will get more 
revenue. We will be above the midpoint of the range of possible 
outcomes.
  Now we can go back and we can check what has actually happened. That 
is this red line. It is below the worst case possible outcome. Far 
below it.
  So this notion that the tax cuts were going to generate more revenue 
and were going to prevent massive deficits proved to be wrong. It is 
very simple. This is not theory. This is not ideology. This is reality. 
This is what really happened.

[[Page 26985]]

  We can look at it in a different way. This chart looks back to 1980, 
the relationship between spending and revenue of the United States 
expressed as a share of gross domestic product. Why do we do it that 
way? Why do we do it as a share of gross domestic product? Because 
every economist says that is the appropriate way to compare spending 
over time and revenue over time because it takes out the effects of 
inflation and growth, so we are comparing apples to apples.
  Here is what the line shows: Spending in the 1980s was between 21 and 
23.5 percent of gross domestic production. During the 1990s, 
interestingly enough, during the Democrat administration, the spending 
came down as a share of gross domestic production each and every year, 
the 8 years of the Clinton administration. So at the end of that time 
we were below 19 percent of gross domestic production on spending. 
Since that time, spending has gone up to approaching 20 percent of 
gross domestic production now.
  My colleagues on the other side of the aisle want to blame Democrats 
for spending. But Democrats have not been in charge during this period. 
During this period, Republicans have controlled the White House, the 
Senate, the House. They are responsible for every dime of this 
increase.
  Let's look at the revenue side. When President Bush came in, 
revenue--as he correctly stated--was at a very high level historically, 
about 20.6 percent of gross domestic production. It was substantially 
above where it was in the 1980s and 1990s.
  But look what has happened since. Revenue has collapsed. Last year it 
was the lowest it has been as a share of gross domestic production 
since 1959. Some of my friends on the other side want to concentrate on 
this uptick. And it is true, revenue has increased over the last year. 
But it is still way below where it has been historically and way below 
where it was in 2001. The result is the increased spending, the reduced 
revenue--by the way, about half the reduction in revenue is from tax 
cuts--the combination of increased spending and reduced revenue has 
opened up a chasm. That is why we have massive deficits and why we are 
going to have massive deficits going forward--and, I might add, at the 
worst possible time.
  Why is it the worst possible time? Because the baby boomers are going 
to start to retire in 2008. Right here the baby boomers are going to 
start to retire. That is going to change everything in a dramatic way.
  The President assured us when we embarked on this course that there 
would not be deficits. Then, the next year, he told us the deficits 
would be small and short term. Then, the next year, he told us they 
would be small by historical standards. Now he says he is going to cut 
them in half over the next 5 years.
  Let's compare rhetoric to reality. Here is what has happened. In 
2001, the first year he was in office, inheriting surpluses from the 
Clinton administration, we had a $128 billion surplus. The next year, 
we were back in deficit. The next year, 2003, we had the biggest 
deficit ever, only to be exceeded, in 2004, by an even larger deficit. 
And this year, again, we have the third largest deficit in our history 
but somewhat of an improvement.
  Let me say to my colleagues, this modest improvement is largely 
illusory because it focuses just on the deficit. I say to my 
colleagues, what we ought to be thinking about, what is really far more 
important to the fiscal future of the country, is not the growth of 
deficits but the growth of the debt. Why do I say that? Because if you 
look at what happened to the increase in the debt last year, you see 
that it increased far more than the deficit figure that is quoted in 
the news media.
  Why is that? Well, the biggest reason is because under the 
President's plan, $173 billion of Social Security money was taken to 
pay for other things. That all gets added to the debt. It all has to be 
paid back. But it is not included in the deficit calculation. Very 
frankly, these deficit calculations are increasingly irrelevant to 
understanding the true fiscal condition of the country.
  Now, last year, instead of the debt increasing by what was the 
advertised deficit of $319 billion, the debt of the country actually 
increased by $551 billion. I find that this is largely not understood. 
When I do presentations, most people think, in kind of a commonsense 
way, that the debt must increase by the amount of the deficit. But that 
is not the case. The fundamental reason it is not the case is because 
under the President's plan money is being taken from every trust fund 
in sight to cover the spending, and it all gets added to the debt, but 
it is not included in the deficit calculation. So last year, the debt 
of the country increased by $551 billion.
  This is so important to understand historically. I see the news 
media, very frequently, say: Well, as a share of GDP the deficit is not 
as big as the deficits were in the 1980s. That is true. But it is 
totally misleading. Why? Because back in the 1980s, there was virtually 
no Social Security surplus to be used to pay for other things. In fact, 
until 1984, there was no Social Security surplus--none. Then, in the 
1980s, the Social Security surpluses were very modest. But look what 
has happened over time. The Social Security surpluses have exploded, 
masking the true size of what is being added to the debt of the 
country--masking the true size of the deficits is probably a better way 
to say it.
  Last year, the amount of Social Security funds that were taken to pay 
for other things reached $173 billion, and not a dime of it got counted 
in the deficit calculation. It all got added to the debt. It is all 
going to have to be paid back, but you don't read about it anywhere in 
the news media. They don't talk about how much the debt increased.
  This is a shell game of enormous proportion that is going on here. I 
say to my colleagues, if any private sector entity tried to do what we 
are doing here, they would be headed for a Federal facility. But it 
would not be the Congress of the United States, it would not be the 
White House, they would be headed to Federal prison because any private 
sector entity that tried to take the retirement funds of its employees 
and use them to pay for current expenses, they would be guilty of 
Federal violations of law. They would be guilty of fraud. You cannot 
take the retirement funds of your employees and use it to pay current 
expenses. That is exactly what we are doing here, every year.
  Under the President's plan, over the next 10 years, at the very time 
he says Social Security is short of money for the long term, his budget 
plan and the budget plans that passed here in the Congress of the 
United States, are going to take $2.5 trillion from Social Security and 
use it to pay the operating expenses of the Federal Government.
  Is anybody paying attention? Is anybody paying attention to what is 
going on here? Over the next 10 years, $2.5 trillion of Social Security 
money is going to be taken to pay for other things. We are headed for a 
train wreck. The President says: Don't worry. We are going to cut the 
deficit in half over the next 5 years.
  Our problem is not a 5-year problem. In fact, that is the sweet spot 
of the budget cycle. That is the sweet spot because that is before the 
baby boomers have retired. In addition, the only way the President gets 
to his claim of reducing the deficit, over 5 years, in half is he just 
leaves out things. He left out war costs past September 30 of this 
year. That is $300 billion, according to the Congressional Budget 
Office. He left out the cost of fixing the alternative minimum tax. 
That costs $700 billion to fix. There is not a dime of it in his 
budget.
  When you add back the things he left out, here is the picture we see 
emerging, and this is just the deficit calculation. The debt 
calculation, as I have described previously, is far worse. We are going 
into a circumstance in which the next 5 years--these are the good 
times; it is before baby boomers retire--we are headed for an 
extraordinarily serious set of circumstances if the budget plan of the 
President is maintained. Why? Because many of the proposals he has 
explode in cost right beyond the 5-year budget window. For example, the 
cost of his tax cuts absolutely explode right beyond the 5-year

[[Page 26986]]

budget window. So does the cost of dealing with the alternative minimum 
tax. It explodes beyond the 5-year budget window.
  We have had a lot of talk on the floor of the Senate about this being 
a deficit reduction package. No, it is not. This is not a deficit 
reduction package, this reconciliation package. This reconciliation 
package has three parts: spending changes that save $35 billion over 5 
years, these additional tax cuts that cost $60 billion over 5 years--so 
you put the two together, that adds to the deficit; it does not reduce 
the deficit--and the third chapter is the chapter they do not want you 
to read in this book because the third chapter is to increase the debt 
of the country by $781 billion. It is all in one fell swoop.
  As we look ahead to the 5-year budget that has been adopted by our 
colleagues--not with my support; I voted against it--but this is what 
is going to happen to the debt of the country over the next 5 years 
under this plan. By the way, these are not my numbers. These are their 
numbers. These are the numbers in their budget documents about what 
happens to the debt--not the deficits, the debt.
  It is something the news media--it is interesting, the news galleries 
are absolutely empty. Oh, no, there is one lone soul there--one lone 
soul. The news media does not want to report on this. Why don't they 
want to report on it? Because it is a little bit complicated. You 
actually have to read. You actually have to do a little studying. It is 
not like covering the latest scandal. They love to cover scandal 
because that is easy to write about. Budget stories and what is 
happening to the fiscal condition of the country, that is much more 
difficult because you actually have to get your numbers right.
  No one is paying attention. I have not seen a single national story 
on the growth of the debt. They are writing about the deficits because 
that is what they have written about for 20 years. They don't get the 
whole thing has changed dramatically since the 1980s because of how the 
policy of our Government has changed to raiding the Social Security 
trust funds for every dollar that is in them for the next 10 years.
  But do you know what? It does not matter they do not write the story. 
It does not matter because the reality is coming in on us, and it is 
coming in on us much sooner than people understand because what really 
affects the strength of America, the fiscal strength of America, is the 
debt that is being built up, and the budget that has passed both Houses 
of Congress is going to increase the debt. It started at $7.9 trillion 
this year. It is going to go up to $8.6 trillion, then to $9.2 
trillion, then to $9.9 trillion, then to $10.6 trillion, then to $11.3 
trillion over the 5 years of this budget.
  Again, these are not my numbers. These are not my numbers. These are 
the numbers in their own budget documents about their prediction about 
what will happen to the debt with the budget that has been adopted.
  The debt is exploding before the baby boomers retire. What are the 
implications? Well, here is one of them. Foreign holdings of our debt 
have doubled in the last 5 years. It took 42 Presidents, pictured here, 
224 years to run up $1 trillion of external debt. This President has 
exceeded them all. He was able to double foreign holdings of our debt 
in just 5 years. It took 42 Presidents 224 years to run up $1 trillion 
of external debt. This President has added more than $1 trillion of 
external debt in 5 years.
  To whom do we owe the debt? Well, here is the latest scorecard. We 
owe Japan $687 billion. We owe China $252 billion. We owe the United 
Kingdom $182 billion. And my favorite, the Caribbean banking centers, 
we owe over $100 billion. We owe South Korea over $60 billion. I submit 
to my colleagues, that does not make America stronger. That makes 
America weaker.
  So now we turn to the legislation before us. One would expect that 
the Congress would be about reducing the deficit, reducing the debt, in 
light of what has happened. In light of the fact that the debt during 
this Presidency has gone up $3 trillion already, in light of the fact 
that under the 5-year budget before us, the debt is going to go up 
another $3 trillion over the next 5 years, you would think we would be 
here trying to reduce the explosion of debt. Surprise, surprise. No. 
This reconciliation process, a fast-track process that was devised to 
circumvent the rules of the Senate, was put in place to reduce 
deficits. That is the whole purpose of reconciliation. But it has been 
hijacked, and now it is being used not to reduce deficits but to expand 
them.
  I tell you, I go home some nights and I pinch myself thinking I am 
caught up in some surreal comedy. This has to be a comedy: The debt is 
exploding before the baby boomers retire, and in the Congress, the 
reconciliation process that was adopted to reduce deficits has been 
hijacked and is being used to increase deficits.
  What is wrong with this picture? I submit what is wrong with this 
picture is, it is utterly and completely disconnected from reality. Now 
we have before us a bill that is going to cut taxes over the next 5 
years by $60 billion. It is going to make the deficit worse by $60 
billion.
  This is what Chairman Greenspan has said about the notion of cutting 
taxes by borrowing. Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan opposes deficit-
financed tax cuts. He said:

       [W]e should not be cutting taxes by borrowing.

  He is right. That is what we are doing. We are borrowing every dime 
of this, borrowing it from Japan, China, Caribbean banking centers.
  Here is the effect of the reconciliation package, $35 billion of 
spending savings over 5 years, completely and totally wiped out by $60 
billion of tax cuts not paid for. The net result is to increase the 
deficit, to increase the debt by $25 billion, but that is right in line 
with the fiscal policies that have been adopted by this President and 
by this Republican majority, because this is their record.
  This is where they took over. The debt limit had not been increased 
for 5 years in this country. In 2002, in one year, they increased it by 
$450 billion. In 2003, they increased it by $984 billion. In 2004, they 
increased it by $800 billion. Now, with this reconciliation proposal, 
they want to increase the debt by $781 billion. Add it all up, and this 
President will have increased the debt in these 5 years by $3 trillion. 
Over the next 5 years, according to their own estimates, they are going 
to increase the debt another $3 trillion. That is real money.
  The Chairman of the Federal Reserve has said this:

       All I'm saying is that my general view is I like to see the 
     tax burden as low as possible.

  Don't we all. I would like nothing better than to have my tax burden 
reduced.

       And in that context, I would like to see tax cuts 
     continued. But, as I indicated earlier, that has got to be, 
     in my judgment, in the context of a PAYGO resolution.

  What is pay-go? Pay-go says you can have more tax cuts, but you have 
to pay for them. You can have more spending, but you have to pay for 
it. Because if you don't, you add to the debt and deficit burden.
  That brings me to the amendment that I send to the desk at this time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from North Dakota [Mr. Conrad] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2602.

  Mr. CONRAD. I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')
  Mr. CONRAD. Madam President, what does this amendment do? It provides 
for the extension of the expiring tax provisions that expire this year 
to be effective next year. It extends all of them. It does not extend 
provisions that expire next year for 2007 or 2008 or 2009. It is 
completely paid for over the 10 years. It provides for hurricane 
disaster relief identical to what Chairman Grassley has included in his 
provision. It provides for alternative minimum tax relief, but in an 
even better way than what is in the chairman's

[[Page 26987]]

mark. Because while the chairman's mark says it is a hold-harmless 
provision, in fact, 600,000 more American taxpayers will pay the 
alternative minimum tax than paid it this year. We will go from 3 
million people paying the alternative minimum tax to 3.6 million.
  Remember, the alternative minimum tax, the old millionaire's tax, has 
now become a middle-class tax trap. My amendment is a real hold 
harmless on alternative minimum tax. There will be no increase in the 
number of Americans paying the alternative minimum tax--none. Instead 
of a 600,000 increase of American taxpayers paying the AMT, we will 
only have the same number paying next year as this year.
  In addition, we extend the R&D tax credit, the State sales tax 
deduction, the college tuition deduction, the welfare-to-work and work 
opportunity tax credits, the teacher classroom expenses deduction, the 
leasehold improvement and restaurant depreciation, and all other 
traditional tax extenders that expire this year to be effective next 
year. We pay for those provisions. Instead of putting it on the charge 
card, instead of running up the debt, adding to the deficit, shoving it 
off on our kids, we pay for it.
  How do we do it? First, we use the same offsets that are in the 
chairman's package with the exception of the charitable revenue raisers 
because we don't have the charitable package here. They include the 
provisions that he has to close the tax gap by shutting down abusive 
tax shelters. I applaud the chairman for having those in his mark. He 
is exactly right to have them there. We adopt those same provisions.
  In addition, we end the loophole for oil companies that lets them 
avoid taxes on their foreign operations. That is $10 billion. We end 
the tax benefit for leasing foreign subway and sewer systems. That 
saves $5 billion.
  I want to explain this one to my colleagues. Here is what is going 
on. This is one of the biggest scams ever cooked up by accounting 
firms. Most accounting firms don't engage in this kind of activity, but 
there are a few who do. Here is what they are doing. They are buying 
foreign subway and sewer systems in U.S. shell operations, depreciating 
their assets for U.S. tax purposes, and leasing the subway and the 
sewer systems back to the foreign cities. I know this sounds 
unbelievable, but that is what is going on. This is a scam.
  Some of my colleagues say: Senator, you are increasing taxes in order 
to pay for this tax cut package. I suppose you could say that. But is 
this a tax break anybody thinks should be in place? Do you think we 
should allow companies to buy foreign subway and sewer systems, 
depreciate them on their books, reduce their U.S. taxes, and then lease 
them back to those European cities? Does anybody believe that is not 
abuse?
  We also require tax withholding on Government payments to contractors 
such as Halliburton. Why shouldn't they have withholding, just as 
working Americans have withholding on their tax obligations? That saves 
$7 billion.
  We renew the Superfund tax so that polluting companies pay for 
cleaning up toxic waste sites. That tax is 9.7 cents a barrel. Oil 
right now is going for close to $60 a barrel. It seems entirely 
reasonable to me that we ask those who have contributed to these sites 
that need to be cleaned up to pay for it, 9.7 cents a barrel.
  We close other tax loopholes as well. That is how we pay for this 
package. Why would we not pay for this package? Why should we not 
prevent the deficit and debt from being increased?
  Some of my colleagues argued in the Finance Committee: Senator, you 
are raising taxes to pay for the tax cut. Here is what the chairman 
said:

       We've found $180 billion over the last few years in things 
     that are examples of loophole closings and abusive tax 
     shelters. And that's what they are, people . . . that are 
     avoiding taxes--

  I would amend that to companies as well.

     --now that ought to pay taxes without changing the rate of 
     taxation.

  The chairman had it exactly right. We now know the tax gap in this 
country, the difference between what is owed and what is actually being 
paid, is $350 billion a year. Let's close down these scams. Let's close 
down these loopholes. Let's close down these abuses and use a portion 
of it to pay for extending these very worthy tax provisions that are in 
this package. That is what my amendment is about.
  For those who say they care about fiscal responsibility, for those 
who say they are concerned about the explosion of deficits and debt, 
here is a chance to prove it. Here is a chance to vote for this 
amendment that will extend the tax provisions that are expiring, those 
that are expiring this year for next year's taxes, and to pay for it by 
closing abusive tax shelters.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Madam President, I thought Senator Kyl wanted some 
time. What I would like to do, if it is OK with the other side, is give 
Senator Kyl some time off of our time and then right after him, Senator 
Thomas, because Senator Thomas has been waiting for a long time to 
speak. I ask unanimous consent to make that the speaking order. These 
folks are talking about maybe 20 minutes apiece or less.
  Mr. CONRAD. Reserving the right to object--and it is not my intention 
to object--I would like to inquire as to the parliamentary situation. 
How much time is left on my amendment?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has used 7 minutes on his 
amendment, which leaves him 53 minutes. The first 28 minutes was 
charged to the bill so that the amendment was not pending at that time.
  Mr. CONRAD. So I have 53 minutes remaining on my side, and they have 
an hour left on their side?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. That is correct.
  Mr. CONRAD. I inquire of the Senator from California, why does she 
seek recognition and how much time does she require?
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I have two amendments. I will not require more than 
15 minutes.
  Mr. CONRAD. Is the Senator seeking time off the bill or she would 
have her own amendment time? I would not object to the request of the 
chairman to have speaking time. We would then intend to lay my 
amendment aside.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Yes, we would be willing to do that. We are looking at 
some votes around noon. Yours would be one of those. We don't have 
unanimous consent on that.
  Mr. CONRAD. I will defer to the manager of the bill.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the clerk will call the 
roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Ensign). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, we are moving along on the amendment 
offered by the Senator from North Dakota. I got clearance from the 
chairman of the committee to ask unanimous consent that there be 40 
minutes of debate remaining on the Conrad amendment equally divided, 20 
minutes in favor of those who are speaking against the amendment and 
then 20 minutes to be controlled by the Senator from North Dakota.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. BAUCUS. And also that there would be no second-degree amendments 
and the vote would then occur immediately following the 40 minutes in 
relation to the Conrad amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is 
so ordered.
  Who yields time?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I yield 10 minutes to Senator Kyl.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona is recognized for 10 
minutes.
  Mr. KYL. I thank the Chair. I thank the chairman.
  This is a choice between the product of the Finance Committee and the

[[Page 26988]]

amendment offered by the Senator from North Dakota. I strongly urge my 
colleagues to support the product of the committee and to defeat the 
Conrad amendment.
  Let's first focus on this issue of deficit. The deficit reduction 
that has occurred as a result of the President's tax policies supported 
by the Republican Members of Congress has been nothing short of 
incredible.
  This is a choice between a continuation of a policy which provides 
economic growth for our country and more money for our families, more 
investment for our businesses, and therefore more jobs for Americans. 
Look at some of these statistics in terms of the gross domestic product 
growth in our country. Whether you embraced the lower rates at the 
time, I think everybody has to acknowledge that the rates we put into 
effect in 2003 have had a dramatic effect.
  Consider: The economy grew at a 3.8-percent annual rate in the third 
quarter. That is the 10th straight quarter the GDP grew at a rate above 
3 percent. We remain the fastest growing industrialized country in the 
world. That is the longest such period of growth in our history since 
World War II.
  Business investment: In the nine quarters before the 2003 tax rates 
were put into effect, business investment fell. We passed the tax 
provisions to cut taxes on capital gains, for example, and we reversed 
that. In fact, business investment has now increased at an annual rate 
of 6.9 percent. That means jobs to our economy and more wealth for 
American families.
  In terms of deficit reduction, specifically, we are not undertaxed. 
Congress is spending too much. That is what is creating the deficit. 
Nevertheless, as a share of our GDP, the 2005 deficit was 2.6 percent, 
down from a 3.6-percent share in 2004. In fact, before Hurricane 
Katrina we were well on the way toward achieving the President's 
objective of cutting the deficit in half in the next 2 years. In fiscal 
year 2005, taxpayers sent Washington $274 billion more in revenue than 
the year before, and $100 billion more than we predicted back in 
January.
  How could we be so far off? This economy is so strong, it is growing 
so rapidly that even at the lower tax rates we are producing more 
revenue to the Federal Treasury. This is not a path from which we 
should deviate. We should continue this path and not adopt the 
principle of the substitute amendment offered by the Senator from North 
Dakota. What his amendment presumes is something very strange in 
economics, and that is that somehow we have reached a magic Minerva, an 
equilibrium where the Federal Government is taking a tax in the right 
amount from American citizens never to be changed one iota, 
notwithstanding the fact we will continue to spend more and more and 
more, and we will have to have the taxes to pay for that spending or go 
deeper in debt.
  The pay-go amendment that is the centerpiece of the amendment 
proposed as a practical matter does not affect the most significant 
aspects of our continued spending, namely the mandatory increases in 
our mandatory spending, our so-called entitlements--Medicare, Medicaid, 
Social Security, that which represents about two-thirds of the 
spending. As a result, the big-ticket items are not restrained in any 
way. All that is restrained is the ability to promote the continuation 
of our current tax rates. If we don't continue these tax rates, if we 
don't take action, for example, this year to extend the capital gains 
and dividends tax rates for another 2 years, we are going to find in a 
couple years the American taxpayers are going to be faced with a huge 
tax increase, and that is because without further action those tax 
rates will go up by 25 percent in 2 years. That is not right.
  Now, some of our colleagues say, well, these tax rates only help the 
wealthy in our country. Well, is that so? From a column that was 
authored by Larry Kudlow, a noted economist: The investor class in 
America ``continues to grow by leaps and bounds . . . The number of 
families owning stocks has risen to 56.9 million from 54.1 million, 
meaning nearly 60 percent of U.S. households are invested in equities 
today.'' We ``have become a society of equity investors.''
  Zogby polling shows that nearly all Americans--93 percent--earning 
$75,000 a year or more own stocks. They can't all be rich. And how 
about those earning up to $75,000 a year? In this group, more than 
half, or 56 percent, own shares. Of those earning below $50,000 a 
year--a group that in the aggregate pays very little taxes overall--30 
percent own stocks.
  So the continuation of the 15-percent rate on dividends is a matter 
that affects a very large swath of Americans. As a matter of fact, 23 
percent of all filers spread evenly across income categories reported 
dividend income in 2003 and of that group, 30 percent, 30.6 percent had 
an adjusted gross income under $30,000. Rich people? I don't think so.
  How about capital gains? Seventeen percent of all filers spread 
equally across income categories reported capital gains in 2003, and of 
that group 30.1 percent had adjusted gross income of under $30,000. The 
rich? I don't think so.
  How about some of the other provisions in the bill from the 
committee? The savers credit, only 4 percent of filers benefited from 
that in 2004.
  The above-the-line-deduction for college tuition costs, only 2.7 
percent of filers claimed that deduction in 2003.
  AMT, only 6 percent of filers are affected by that.
  Now, why are all of these things in the committee mark? Because they 
still represent important policy and we continue to support all of 
those things.
  With AMT, the number of filers is going to double so we have to do 
something about that. But the bottom line is when you are comparing 
that to capital gains and dividends, far more Americans are affected by 
capital gains and dividends and they are not just the wealthy. I read 
the statistics for $30,000 and under.
  The other flaw in the amendment of the Senator from North Dakota is 
that the whole question of what ``tax cuts cost'' is upside down. The 
Senator from North Dakota raises that question with respect to revenues 
to the Federal Government. How much does it cost the Federal Government 
to have a tax cut? Think about it. That is a strange way to put it. How 
much does it cost the Federal Government to cut your taxes?
  I will put that question the other way around. How much does it cost 
you when we have a tax increase? Because that is exactly what will 
happen in 2 years if we don't extend the current tax rates. We should 
be asking what it costs American families, American taxpayers, and the 
American economy, American businesses. What is it going to cost them if 
we take more of their hard-earned money and bring it back to Washington 
for us in our wisdom to figure out how to spend? That is the question 
we should be asking.
  What is the productive part of our economy? Does the Government 
create jobs?
  Other than these very hard-working clerks here and the other jobs in 
the Federal Government, we don't create jobs. The private sector 
creates jobs. It costs money to pay employees. That is why employers 
try to make money, so they can hire more people, more people will have 
jobs, their families will be better off. We all understand how the 
private market works. It requires capital, it requires profits, it 
requires the Government to get out of the way and not take so much of 
its money, frankly, and that is why the real question should be with 
regard to this so-called pay-go, not how much it is going to cost the 
Federal Government, but how much a tax increase which will result from 
the policies that are being proposed on the other side of the aisle, 
how much that tax increase is going to cost hard-working Americans. 
That is the real question we should be asking.
  We need to support the proposal that is before us on the floor today, 
a proposal which in large measure makes American taxpayers better off 
and increases the revenues to the Treasury of the Government because 
the tax policies we have had in place since 2003 are working, both to 
help stimulate investment in the private sector and create more jobs, 
and because they are low enough that they create economic activity that 
can be taxed, providing

[[Page 26989]]

more revenue to the Federal Treasury. We should reject the amendment of 
the Senator from North Dakota because it doesn't pursue that same 
policy goal.
  The only caveat to this, of course, is that the capital gains and 
dividends tax rates I have been talking about are not included in the 
proposal on the floor or in the proposal of the Senator from North 
Dakota. But I can assure my colleagues it will be part of the 
conference report. There is no way we are going to consider a 
conference report that doesn't continue these current tax policies. To 
not do so, as I said, would be to begin the biggest tax increase in the 
history of this country, and we are not going to do that at a time when 
we need to keep the economy robustly growing as it has been.
  I say to my colleagues, the tax proposals of President Bush have been 
working. Our economy is producing a tremendous number of new jobs, 
revenue growth for the private sector as well as for the Government 
sector. Why would we want to turn from that?
  With respect to paying for it, let's remember who bears the cost.
  There is no free lunch at the end of the day. The taxpayers are going 
to bear the cost. As a result, the real question we should be asking is 
not how much these policies cost the Government, but how much they cost 
the taxpayers.
  I urge the Senate to vote against the amendment of the Senator from 
North Dakota and support the chairman's mark.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? The Senator from North 
Dakota.
  Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, how much time did the Senator from Arizona 
consume?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Ten minutes.
  Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, I wish to take a few minutes to respond.
  The Senator from Arizona started with a statement that is truly 
breathtaking. The Senator from Arizona said that deficit reduction 
created by the Bush administration policies was, I think he used the 
word ``extraordinary.'' Yeah, it is extraordinary all right. Here is 
what has happened to the debt under these policies.
  When the President came in, there had been no increase in the debt 
limit of the United States for 5 years. After 1 year of the President's 
policies, the debt limit was increased $450 billion. The next year, 
they increased the debt $984 billion. The next year, they increased the 
debt $800 billion. In this reconciliation package, they are going to 
increase the debt limit $781 billion. The Senator from Arizona is on 
the floor saying they have done something to reduce the deficit? Come 
on. These are the biggest deficits, the biggest increase in the debt in 
the history of America, and it doesn't end with what they have already 
done.
  Here is what they are going to do. These are not my calculations. 
These are the numbers that are in their own budget document. They are 
going to increase the debt another $600 billion next year, another $600 
billion the next year, another $700 billion the next year, another $700 
million the next year, and another $700 billion the next year. They 
already increased the debt $3 trillion, and under this budget plan, 
over the next 5 years they are going to increase it another $3 
trillion, and he is out here talking about deficit reduction? Come on. 
There is no deficit reduction here.
  Mr. KYL. Will the Senator yield?
  Mr. CONRAD. No, I won't yield. The Senator had his chance. I am going 
to respond, and then I will be happy to engage in debate.
  Mr. KYL. Since the Senator referred to me by name, I would like the 
opportunity to ask a question.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota has the floor.
  Mr. CONRAD. I did not refer to the Senator by name. I referred to 
``the Senator from Arizona.'' The Senator from Arizona came out here 
and said there has been extraordinary deficit reduction. There is no 
deficit reduction. There is record explosion of debt, that is what is 
going on.
  The Senator said that deficit, as a share of GDP, is not so bad. That 
is only because he leaves out something. And the something he leaves 
out is all the money that is being taken from Social Security and used 
to pay for other items because back in the eighties there was no Social 
Security surplus, or virtually none. Last year, the Social Security 
funds that were being used to try to mask the true size of what is 
going on was $173 billion. You add that back in, and the increase in 
debt of this country was 4.5 percent of GDP.
  In the European Union, you can't be a member if you run deficits 
above 3.0 percent of GDP. But the addition to debt in this country last 
year was 4.6 percent of GDP when you add back all the money that is 
being taken from trust funds and used to pay for other items.
  Here is what he doesn't want to talk about. Here is the explosion of 
Social Security money being taken to pay for other things. Look back in 
the eighties, there was virtually no Social Security surplus. In fact, 
in 1983, there was none. Then there was a couple hundred million 
dollars a year. Now it is approaching $200 billion a year, and they 
want to forget about it, they don't want to count it?
  I tell you what is going on here is so utterly disconnected from 
reality. This chart shows the spending line since the eighties and the 
revenue line. In the nineties, we brought spending down each and every 
year as a share of GDP. Now we have had a big tick upwards. The Senator 
from Arizona said he wonders how we reached some nirvana of balance 
between spending and revenue. There is no balance, that is the point. 
That is what is wrong. We see the spending line and the revenue line. 
Look at the gap.
  Our friends on the other side want to complain about the spending. 
Guess what. They are responsible for every dime of it. This happened on 
their watch. They control the House, they control the Senate, they 
control the White House. They are responsible for every dime of the 
increase in spending.
  Here is what has happened to the revenue. It has collapsed. The 
result is an enormous gap, and he says he wonders how we reached some 
nirvana of balance between spending and revenue. There is no balance. 
That is the point.
  Then our colleague talked about how wonderful the economic 
performance has been. No, it hasn't. Here is the record on job 
creation, comparing the average of the last nine recessions since World 
War II. Here is what happened over the period of time--this is in 
number of months on the bottom. This is a jobless recovery. This red 
line is the average of what has happened after the last nine 
recessions. By this stage, 55 months after the trough, typically 7 
million jobs have been created in the private sector, more than have 
been created in this recovery.
  So we are running 7 million private sector jobs behind the average of 
the last nine recoveries since World War II. This is great economic 
performance? It is the worst employment performance we have had of any 
of the nine recessions since World War II.
  It is not just job growth, it is also GDP growth. GDP growth lags 
behind the typical recovery by 27 percent over the same period of time.
  The Senator talked about business investment. Let's look at business 
investment. Let's look at the last nine recessions. At this stage, we 
are running 53 percent less business investment than in the nine 
previous recoveries from recessions. And he touts this economic record? 
Mr. President, this is not a record of which to be proud.
  The Senator also talked about the dividend tax cut, and he talked 
about capital gains. They are not in the underlying amendment of the 
chairman of the committee. They are not in the Finance Committee's 
mark. So he is comparing apples to something else.
  My amendment says we have to go back to the disciplines we have used 
in the past to restore fiscal discipline. What are they? Pay-go is one 
of the major budget disciplines, and it simply says: If you are going 
to have more tax cuts, fine, you have to pay for them. If you have more 
spending, fine, you have to pay for it. That is one of the key things 
we must do to get this Nation back on track.
  This notion that we keep borrowing the money, keep spending the 
money,

[[Page 26990]]

keep more and more tax cuts, don't worry if anything adds up is leading 
us deeper and deeper into debt. When are we going to stop this?
  Mr. President, how much time do I have left?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 11\1/2\ minutes left.
  Mr. CONRAD. I ask if the Chair will notify me when I have used 1 more 
minute.
  Mr. President, let me say to my colleagues, I am beginning to wonder 
what are we thinking around here? What are we thinking of, Republicans 
and Democrats? When are we going to turn the corner? When are we going 
to say enough is enough? When are we going to say adding $3 trillion of 
debt in the last 5 years and headed for the next 5 years adding another 
$3 trillion, in effect, doubling the debt of our country in 10 years--
that is what we are doing. The result is foreign holdings of our debt 
have doubled in 5 years. Mr. President, I say to my colleagues, this is 
not sustainable.
  On the Republican side, they say we should just cut the spending. OK, 
do it, cut it. If you don't want to tax anymore, cut the spending to 
match the taxes you are willing to levy.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has used an additional minute.
  Mr. CONRAD. I ask for another 30 seconds.
  My Republican friends said they are fiscally responsible. When are 
they going to demonstrate it? If you are only willing to tax at 17 
percent of GDP, then cut the spending 17 percent of GDP. If they think, 
well, because of the war and because of the need for homeland security, 
we need to spend more than 17 percent of GDP, which is what they are 
doing in their budgets--they are not spending 17 percent of GDP, they 
are spending 19 percent of GDP, in fact they are going to 20 percent of 
GDP, then tax at 20 percent of GDP so you pay your bills. Do one of the 
two. But don't just keep putting it on the charge card.
  I say to my Democratic colleagues the same thing. We cannot be for 
more spending than we are for levying the taxes to raise it. What is 
going on in this town is absolutely and totally irresponsible, and it 
is going to put us in a very weakened position as a country. We have 
increased foreign holdings of our debt 100 percent in 5 years. It took 
224 years to run up a trillion dollars of external debt. This President 
has doubled it in 5 years. That does not strengthen America.
  I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield whatever time he might consume 
of my remaining time to the Senator from Wyoming.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is recognized.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, I thank the chairman. I appreciate the 
opportunity to deal with this issue that is before us. By the way, I am 
not speaking on the Conrad amendment, but I am, as a matter of fact, 
speaking on the Dorgan amendment in general time. I have to say to my 
friend from North Dakota that I certainly agree with the idea that we 
have gone out of control in terms of our spending. I don't agree with 
the idea that we have to raise taxes to offset it. What we ought to be 
looking at is reducing the size of Government.
  Quite frankly, I would like to see some activity on that side of the 
aisle, as well as this side, to take a look at some of the programs we 
have and see if they still need to continue to exist. With regard to 
the idea that the growth of the Federal Government is out of control, 
we have gotten into a feeling that every time there is a need in the 
country for anything the Federal Government ought to do it and 
establish a new program.
  I happen to have a bill called the sunset bill which I think we ought 
to take a look at. We ought to take a look at programs that have been 
in existence for 10 years and see if they are as important now as they 
were when they were created. If not, let's change them.
  In any event, I want to talk in opposition to the Dorgan amendment, 
which is the windfall profits tax amendment, which has to do with the 
bill before us. What we are talking about in this tax bill is the 
economy. We are talking about growth. Notwithstanding what has been 
said, we have had growth, 3.5 percent growth in GDP in the last 
quarter. That is above average in the last 10 years. We do have growth. 
That is what it is all about.
  We also ought to recognize when we are able to leave people with more 
money in their hands to spend, that is a good thing. If you can reduce 
taxes so people have money to invest, that is a good thing. That is 
what creates the economy and economic growth. That is what it is all 
about, the economy.
  The other overriding issue before us, although I don't think it is a 
specific issue here, is one of the main factors of the economy, and 
that is energy. Without energy, we don't have an economy. So we are 
talking a lot recently, and should be, about energy--where we are going 
to get energy, where it is going to come from, how we are going to 
invest in new sources of energy. That has been one of the key issues 
for the last year. We finally got an energy policy. Unfortunately, what 
we are talking about now, particularly in this windfall profits 
amendment, is something totally adverse to the philosophy that we have 
developed to create new energy sources.
  The windfall profits tax amendment which has been offered is not only 
bad policy but it sends the wrong message to American companies and to 
entrepreneurs.
  Supporters of this tax have tried to demonize the whole concept of 
making a profit. Companies are in business to make a profit. They make 
profits and create jobs, which is what we are talking about all the 
time. If they did not make a profit they would not be in business, and 
we would not have jobs.
  The Senator was talking about the number of jobs. Why does one think 
there are jobs? Because there are profitable companies. That is what we 
need to be talking about. Supporters of this windfall tax, however, 
want people to believe that the oil industry somehow managed to reap 
undeserved profits, resulting in one of the highest profit margins in 
America.
  Well, they have profits. Who would not have profits when there has 
been that kind of increase in the energy business? It is not the case 
that they are unusually high profit margins. The profits for the oil 
companies measured against other factors of the economy, frankly, are 
quite modest. I have a chart that shows a number of the industries 
which are much higher. These are the earnings of major industries in 
the second quarter, net income on sales in 2005. It shows cents per 
dollar of sales in the various businesses, banks, pharmaceuticals, 
software, semiconductors, diversified financials, household and 
personal products, consumer services, insurance, telecommunications, 
food, beverage and tobacco, real estate, health care, material, all 
U.S. industries, 7.9, and then next, oil and gas, 7.6 percent.
  The third quarter moves them above this to about 8 percent, but look 
at these businesses that are much above that. They keep talking about 
how they have had these unusually high and perhaps even illegal 
profits.
  Those who want to argue about this chart because it shows second 
quarter profits, and they are higher in the third quarter, it has 
changed somewhat, but whatever it is it will be about 8.1 percent for 
the oil industry.
  I wonder if supporters of this windfall profits tax would suggest 
that it be on all of these other businesses that are higher in their 
earnings than the oil and gas industry. I understand one of the 
sponsors of the amendment comes from a State where there are lots of 
insurance companies, and despite a profit of over 10 percent, I do not 
see him rushing to the floor to put a windfall tax on insurance.
  We have had this news media focus on the energy industry and so it 
has become this kind of thing, but I think we have to keep in mind the 
future. I certainly hope as we go about our business we think not only 
about today but about 10 years from now: What are we going to do with 
energy? There has been nothing of more concern to us than energy.
  The facts speak for themselves. The Congress tried to take this 
approach in

[[Page 26991]]

the early 1980s and it did not work. I understand they are saying this 
is not like the other windfall, but indeed it is. It takes profits they 
say are excessive, which are not comparatively, to distribute them back 
out to the public.
  Is that what the business system is about? Is that what the private 
sector is about? I do not believe so.
  The efforts that were made to do that in the past did not work. The 
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has documented this policy 
as a failure in the past, and I can only conclude that it would be a 
failure again in the future. The whole concept defies common sense.
  Who is qualified to deem the profits as determined by the market are 
too high? The market will adjust for that if that is the case. I 
certainly do not believe any Member of Congress has those 
qualifications.
  I understand the politics of wanting to distribute money to everyone. 
That is a great thing to be able to put on one's resume. But it does 
not conceptually, from a policy standpoint, make sense. We live in a 
market economy, and it is the model that works. Of course, we need to 
continue to change our system. But we have the best system in the 
world, and we need to make sure we continue it, unlike Members who have 
tried all of these manipulations and the nonmarket approach, which has 
not worked.
  The market economy means if one engages in a risk associated with 
investment they should reap the benefits from that. Not unlike other 
industries, the oil and gas industry requires significant investment 
and risk. I live in the State of Wyoming which is one of the highest 
producers of energy, and I can say there is a great deal of investment 
that has to go into the production of the energy that goes to New 
England and New York where they do not have any production of their 
own. That is the way it should be. Nevertheless, one cannot sit off 
some other place and say we want energy but we do not want to have any 
investment in it. One cannot sit out on the west coast where there is 
no production, no refineries, and say, well, we want energy but we do 
not want any investment in transportation to get it there or in the 
development of it.
  That is what we hear a great deal on the Senate floor. I think not 
only has that been the case in the past, and it is the case today, 
quite frankly, it is going to be more the case as time goes on. We are 
going to have to look for new ways to develop energy. In Wyoming, we 
are going to have to go to oil shale, for example, which is expensive 
to develop. We are going to have to go to deep wells. We are going to 
have to go to secondary recovery. We are going to have to go to 
alternative fuels. We are going to have to go to converting coal to 
other things. Those are expensive kinds of investments, and that is 
what it is all about.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority's time on the amendment has 
expired.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, as we get to that amendment on windfall 
profits, I hope we will take this into account.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
  Mr. CONRAD. Could I inquire as to the time on my amendment?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 8\1/2\ minutes.
  Mr. CONRAD. And the majority?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority time is expired.
  Mr. CONRAD. I thank the Chair. Mr. President, I go back to the point 
that my colleague from Wyoming made about this relationship between 
spending and revenue. Here is the problem we have. Here is where we are 
in spending as a percentage of gross domestic product. We are at about 
20 percent, a little over. Here is where we are in revenue. We are just 
over 17 percent. It is this gap between spending and revenue that is 
creating these massive deficits, and this is before the baby boomers 
retire. The question is, How do we close this gap?
  We could do it one of three ways: We could cut the spending down to 
the amount of revenue that we are willing to levy. That would mean a 
36-percent cut in every part of Federal spending if we were to hold 
harmless from the cuts Social Security, defense, and interest on the 
debt. We would have to cut everything else--homeland security, aid to 
veterans, education, parks, FBI. All the rest would have to be cut 36 
percent to cut the spending down to the revenue we currently have.
  A second possibility would be to raise revenue up to the spending 
line. That would mean a very significant revenue increase if we were to 
do it just with revenues. A third possibility is some combination of 
spending cuts and revenue increases.
  One of the assumptions being made is that to increase revenue, taxes 
have to be increased. The fact is, the revenue service tells us the tax 
gap, the difference between what is owed and what is being paid, is now 
$350 billion a year.
  Before we talk about a tax increase on anyone, before we have any 
suggestion of a tax increase, we ought to go after that tax gap and we 
ought to do it aggressively. That is part of the amendment that I have 
offered. Frankly, it is a part of the chairman's mark because the 
chairman closes $30 billion of loopholes in his proposal.
  I agree with those, but I say to the Senator from Iowa he does not go 
far enough at closing loopholes. In my proposal, we go further. For 
example, we end the tax benefit for leasing foreign subway and sewer 
systems.
  Why would we not do that? Why do we allow companies to go and buy the 
sewer and subway systems of foreign cities and depreciate them on their 
U.S. taxes, cutting their taxes in our country, and then lease back the 
subway and sewer systems to foreign cities? What a scam. Why are we 
allowing that? Somebody calls that a tax increase? Is that really a tax 
increase to say to companies that they cannot go buy the sewer system 
in a foreign country's city and depreciate it on their U.S. taxes? That 
is what is going on.
  We also would require tax withholding on Government payments to 
contractors like Halliburton. Just like all the rest of us who have 
withholding on our taxes, why do they not have withholding on theirs? 
It would save us a lot of money; renewing the Superfund tax, 9.7 cents 
a barrel on $60-per-barrel oil to clean up these toxic sites.
  One can call those tax increases; I call them closing loopholes. I 
call them closing scams. We ought to do it and use the money to pay for 
extending these tax reductions that are included in my amendment; the 
extending of tax reductions that are reasonable, that are in this 
package.
  I hope my colleagues will think for a minute about what we are doing. 
Debt is growing out of control. Why are we taking steps to add to the 
deficit, to add to the debt? Why not pay for something around here?
  Let us start paying our bills. That is what pay-go is all about. It 
says, if my colleagues want more tax cuts, they have to pay for them. 
If they want more spending, they have to pay for it. That is an 
American value, paying one's bills. We are not doing that. We are 
stacking debt on top of debt. We have added $3 trillion to the debt 
over the 5 years of this Presidency. Under this budget plan, we are 
getting ready to add another $3 trillion of debt before the baby 
boomers retire. We can do better than that. America deserves better 
than that. It certainly does not deserve us stacking debt on top of 
debt.
  I yield the floor and reserve my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that immediately 
after the coming vote on the Conrad amendment, the next speakers and 
amendments be in order as follows: First, Senator Domenici be 
recognized to speak for 20 minutes; Senator Feinstein will be 
recognized to offer two amendments on which there will be a total of 30 
minutes equally divided on the two amendments; following that time, 
that Senator Cantwell be recognized for the purpose of offering her 
amendment with respect to energy price gouging, and there be 60 minutes 
equally divided.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I rise today in support of the substitute 
amendment.

[[Page 26992]]

  Let me first explain that this substitute does not contain everything 
we had hoped to offer. Some of the items that we cannot consider today, 
though, are extremely important to American families.
  They include the Lincoln-Snowe child tax credit fix. The Lincoln-
Snowe provisions would ensure that the working poor can continue to 
receive this valuable credit. Regrettably, the threshold climbs each 
year. And the minimum wage remains stagnant.
  So these families receive a smaller refundable child tax credit each 
passing year.
  Another package we had hoped to include were a few incentives for 
military families. These include a provision to ensure that families 
with someone serving in combat can continue to receive the earned 
income tax credit. With the heavy strain that the Iraq war continues to 
put on military families, Congress can surely do more for these 
families.
  The substitute today does not address a few items for the Gulf States 
I had hoped to include.
  As I have said many times in the past few months, we must address the 
immediate needs of the hundreds of thousands of people affected by the 
hurricanes that ravaged the Gulf States. We cannot forget that the 
recovery in the gulf region is not over. It has hardly begun.
  People have lost everything and need help to rebuild their lives. 
That help has not arrived. We have more work to do in this Congress to 
make sure displaced families have access to health care, unemployment 
benefits while they search for work, childcare so they can get to work, 
and foster care services for needy kids.
  It is irresponsible to leave these people behind and move on to 
cutting taxes before we have completed our job of providing real relief 
to those that have been hurt by the storms.
  But for procedural reasons, we are offering a different substitute. I 
believe that this substitute is a better approach than the bill before 
the Senate today.
  I want to highlight some principles that we pursued in this 
substitute. And what we are not doing here is as important as what we 
are.
  Other than the disaster recovery incentives, we do not add to the 
deficit. That is an important distinction between our substitute and 
the bill before the Senate.
  I know that the majority leadership hopes that spending 
reconciliation cuts will occur at some point. But even if Congress does 
enact those highly controversial cuts, the bill before us today would 
still add to the deficit.
  This is exactly what Alan Greenspan warned us against last week: 
deficit-financed tax cuts.
  How can we face constituents who will see their food stamps or child 
support services cut? How can we tell them that we had to make those 
cuts to pay for tax cuts?
  How could we tell them that Congress cut their benefits for tax cuts 
that will not even take effect until several years down the road?
  Another thing that we do not do in this substitute is any extension 
of tax cuts that don't expire this year. The last 3 years have been the 
3 highest deficits in the Nation's history. At some point, we need to 
do some belt-tightening.
  In all fairness, I support many of these tax cuts. I have cosponsored 
and voted for many of them. But we simply need to prioritize this year. 
We need to do what is urgent first.
  The bill before us today does not include the capital gains and 
dividends tax cuts. But we know that it may well appear at some point 
during this reconciliation process, especially now that the House tax-
writers have chosen capital gains and dividends tax cuts to the 
exclusion of AMT relief.
  Some cite the $20 billion figure for the 2-year extension of capital 
gains and dividends cuts.
  But we are really talking about a $50 billion cost over 10 years. And 
that is the way that we usually score tax bills.
  There are some good items in the bill before us today, but I think in 
order to be a great bill, we must achieve fiscal responsibility. Our 
substitute not only meets all the budget numbers, it does better. The 
2006 loss is below $11 billion, the 5-year loss is $20 billion, and the 
10-year figure actually cuts Federal deficit by $6 billion.
  It comes down to timing, priorities, and fiscal responsibility. I 
urge my colleagues to support this substitute.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, are we now ready to dispose of the 
Conrad amendment?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota has 2 minutes 
remaining.
  Mr. CONRAD. I will be happy to use my time at this point if that will 
help the managers.
  Mr. President, the question before us is, What is our vision for the 
future? If this chart shows your vision of the fiscal future of the 
country, vote against my amendment. If you think the answer to our 
fiscal future is just to add more and more to the debt, then vote 
against me. If you believe it is time to get our fiscal house in order, 
at least to begin steps to get our fiscal house in order, vote with me. 
If you believe the underlying budget makes sense, here is what the 
underlying budget does. For the next 5 years it adds to the debt, going 
from just under $8 trillion to over $11 trillion. It is going to add 
over $3 trillion to the debt over the next 5 years.
  If you think that is a mistake, then support the alternative that I 
am offering, which says: Yes, we will provide the hurricane disaster 
relief; yes, we will provide extensions of the expiring provisions on 
alternative minimum tax--in fact, we will protect 600,000 more 
taxpayers than the chairman's mark. And we will provide the R&D tax 
credit, the State sales tax deduction, the college tuition deduction, 
the Welfare-to-Work and Work Opportunity Tax Credits, the teacher 
classroom expenses deduction, the leasehold improvement and restaurant 
depreciation, and all other traditional tax extenders--but we will pay 
for them.
  How do we pay for them? We take the offsets that are in the 
chairman's mark that are loophole closers that shut down abusive tax 
shelters, and we add additional tax shelters and loophole closers--
ending a loophole for oil companies that lets them avoid taxes on 
foreign operations, ending the tax benefit for the leasing of foreign 
subway and sewer systems--again, I say to my colleagues, why would we 
ever permit that?--require tax withholding on Government payments to 
contractors like Halliburton, and renewing the Superfund tax so that 
polluting companies pay for cleaning up toxic waste.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. All time 
has expired.
  Mr. CONRAD. I ask my colleagues to support my amendment to pay for 
the tax breaks we want to extend. I thank the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order the amendment 
is not germane to the underlying legislation.
  Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act, I move to waive the applicable sections of 
that act for purposes of the pending amendment.
  I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a 
sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Graham). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 44, nays 55, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 330 Leg.]

                                YEAS--44

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln

[[Page 26993]]


     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Voinovich
     Wyden

                                NAYS--55

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Corzine
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this question, the yeas are 44. The nays 
are 55. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having 
voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected and the point of order 
is sustained. The amendment falls.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senator from New 
Mexico is recognized for 20 minutes.
  The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I don't believe I will use 20 minutes.
  I am here this morning to ask a few questions and make a few 
observations about the pending windfall profit tax amendment. I will 
first explain what I think the amendment is all about.
  This imposes a windfall profit tax on all oil sold for more than $40 
a barrel. The tax would be 50 percent. Every year whatever tax is 
collected would be divided up among all individual taxpayers as a 
credit. The only way for a company to avoid the tax would be for it to 
spend all of its receipts above $40 a barrel on investments qualified 
by the Government. In other words, we know best. We know where they 
should invest; qualified investment for things such as pipelines, new 
drilling, refineries, as long as the drilling is in areas that are not 
already proven oil and gas property.
  I don't know what the intention is with reference to oil. Is it to 
produce more oil or not? If it is, it seems to me an investment of oil 
of any type that comes out of the ground would be something we should 
want, but by no means am I suggesting I want to add this list because I 
believe the whole idea is wrongheaded.
  I ask a few questions about what I have observed and what I noted is 
pretty close to right. If Saudi Arabian oil is being sold at $55 a 
barrel in Saudi Arabia, am I correct that any entity that sells that 
oil in the United States would have to pay a tax of $12.50 per barrel, 
even if they sold that in the United States for the same price they 
bought it, to wit, $55 a barrel? Is that what we have in mind? That is, 
if Saudi Arabian oil sells at $55 a barrel, one of our American 
companies has to buy oil to create gasoline for us--if, in fact, they 
buy it at $55--that exceeds the $40. So what if they sell it for $55? 
My arithmetic says that is zero. There is no profit. There is no 
markup.
  Under this amendment, they would still have to pay a tax of $12.50 a 
barrel, selling it at cost. How could that do anything to encourage 
production or investment? It would encourage the opposite. As a matter 
of fact, it would seem to me it would discourage selling oil bought in 
that manner in the United States--something we would not want. The 
market value in the world is $55, and they will lose money selling it 
in the United States. Pretty soon we would have a shortage in the 
United States. Who would want to sell it here?
  In fact, if we look at it, to avoid taking a loss on the sale of that 
Saudi oil in the United States, any importer of that oil, according to 
my arithmetic, would have to sell it at $70 just to cover the cost of 
the tax. It seems to me, in that case, even though the cost of oil is 
$55 in Saudi Arabia, Senator Dorgan's amendment would deem $30 of that 
sale price to be a windfall profit. So the seller would owe $15 to the 
Treasury and would be left with just the $55 necessary to meet the 
cost.
  That is absolutely counterproductive, the wrong thing to do and an 
unintended, but direct, consequence of this way to raise money and 
seemingly to send some kind of message to the oil companies about their 
profits.
  Another question in the scenario that I gave, isn't it true this 
amendment would actually raise the cost of oil from $55 a barrel to $70 
a barrel, on pure economics? This amendment would tell the oil 
companies to sell oil higher than is happening today in order to break 
even because of the imposition of the tax. That would be very bad. 
Would it help the country? Who would it help? It hurts us. It hurts our 
consumers instead of helping the problem attempted to be addressed; 
namely, get the cost of oil down. It would cause the opposite.
  It seems to me, in a general way, the amendment imposes a tax on oil 
that would drive up the price of oil. It is not a tax on the companies. 
It is a tax on oil. Does the Senator have any sort of analysis? I don't 
have one. I wish I did. I wonder what the Congressional Budget Office 
or the Joint Tax Committee or the Energy Information Agency would show 
this amendment would do in terms of the cost to our consumers? Such an 
analysis, which we do not have time to do, would show that American 
consumers would not have a decrease in the cost of gasoline. Rather, it 
would go up. I wish we could have that study. I believe, and I think I 
have a bit of credibility, the imposition of this windfall profit tax 
would cause the price to our consumers to go up, not down.
  It also means that oil companies have an option of selling their oil 
in the United States and paying a sizable tax in the United States. 
They will probably sell it overseas to avoid paying the tax. If they 
have an option to sell it here and paying a tax or selling it overseas, 
they will take the option of selling it overseas. Why not? It is pure 
logic. You lose money selling it in the United States.
  Is the amendment accompanied by analysis that shows how much less oil 
would be available in the United States if this amendment is passed? I 
truly believe it will make less oil available. If less oil is 
available, the price goes up, not down, for those items that come from 
crude oil.
  Does the proponent of the amendment have any kind of analysis as to 
what would happen to the prices if companies stop selling some portion 
of the current imports to the United States? That is a very interesting 
question. I believe what would happen is the opposite of what is 
intended. If this is intended to penalize the companies, rather than 
being a tax on oil, I assure you that if it is a tax on oil, the price 
will go up, not down. It seems there is no argument about that. If the 
price goes up because of the tax, does the gasoline coming from the 
crude oil go down so our consumers get a break? Of course not. The 
price goes up. So we do not get a break; we get the opposite. We get an 
increase. And under the guise of a good bill to help American 
consumers, we get one that clearly will scalp them. They will pay more, 
rather than less, and we will have some money to claim to our taxpayers 
that we are giving them back because we are hurting big oil, which 
seems to be the intention of this amendment.
  I also note this amendment allows the oil sellers to avoid a part of 
the tax if they invest it in new oil wells drilled in areas of the 
country that are not proven up as gas properties. That is very 
interesting. They cannot invest it in oilfields that are proven up that 
require money to drill. They cannot do that. It has to be new 
oilfields. I ask if the proponent of the amendment would submit a list 
of unproven areas in the United States where the drilling of oil is 
supported. Where are the fields for new production that are supported? 
Frankly, every field you try you cannot get it done because of some 
objection or another. In fact, I ask the sponsor, more particularly, 
would he submit to the Senate a list of unproven areas where he, the 
distinguished Senator, supports drilling new fields? It would be all 
right if he gave a list that are supported not necessarily by the 
Senator but by any authentic group.

[[Page 26994]]

  In its totality, let me summarize: This is not a tax on the oil 
companies. This is a tax on oil. It will not produce more oil to tax 
oil. It will not produce lower costs to the consumer by taxing oil. It 
is very logical if you say: Here is a product for sale for $150. That 
is the established price. But now the municipality says: Let's have a 
15-percent sales tax or a 50-percent tax on the profits or whatever we 
determine. That makes the price of the product go up, not down. The 
same will happen with oil. Tax the product, the price goes up. Tax the 
company on profits, unless they do something, the price goes up, not 
down.
  It would be impossible for the energy companies to invest the money 
in a timely manner in the manner prescribed. I cannot imagine $3 
billion or $4 billion being invested in 1 year in the items recommended 
by the Congress that knows best where companies should spend it. It 
seems to me they would have to pay the windfall. They could not do the 
investing.
  There is much more to say. There is no question this will cost the 
consumers more, not less. Gasoline will go up, not down. The supplies 
will be less, not more. All of which we do not want. All of which I 
would think the sponsor of the amendment would not want. It is an 
absolute certainty that is what will happen.
  I yield back the remainder of my time, and I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senator from 
California is recognized to offer two amendments with 30 minutes of 
debate on each amendment, equally divided.
  Mr. REID. If I could direct a question.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The minority leader.
  Mr. REID. It is my understanding that Senator Feinstein and Senator 
Wyden have 30 minutes equally divided.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. No, it is 30 minutes in opposition.
  Mr. REID. You have 15?
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. We have 15 minutes; I have two amendments.
  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent, following the 15 minutes of the 
two Senators, Wyden and Feinstein, I be recognized to use some of my 
leadership time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                      Amendment Nos. 2609 and 2610

  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I send two amendments to the desk. The 
first is an amendment, on behalf of myself, Senators Sununu, Gregg, 
Wyden, Cantwell, Feingold, Burr, McCain, Kerry, and Collins, ``To 
repeal certain tax benefits relating to oil and gas wells intangible 
drilling and development costs.''
  The second amendment is an amendment, on behalf of Senator Kerry and 
myself, which would be a restatement for millionaires of 39.6 percent 
income tax rate, the pre-May 2003 rates of tax on capital gains and 
dividend rates and deduction limitations until the budget deficit is 
eliminated.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from California [Mrs. Feinstein], for herself, 
     Mr. Sununu, Mr. Gregg, Mr. Wyden, Ms. Cantwell, Mr. Feingold, 
     Mr. Burr, Mr. McCain, Mr. Kerry and Ms. Collins, proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2609.
       The Senator from California [Mrs. Feinstein], for herself 
     and Mr. Kerry, proposes an amendment numbered 2610.

  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the reading of 
the amendments be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendments are as follows:

(Purpose: To repeal certain tax benefits relating to oil and gas wells 
               intangible drilling and development costs)

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

     SEC. __. REPEAL OF CERTAIN TAX BENEFITS RELATING TO OIL AND 
                   GAS WELLS INTANGIBLE DRILLING AND DEVELOPMENT 
                   COSTS.

       (a) In General.--Section 263(c) (relating to intangible 
     drilling and development costs) is amended by adding at the 
     end the following new sentence: ``This subsection shall not 
     apply with respect to wells (other than wells drilled for any 
     geothermal deposit (as so defined)) of any integrated oil 
     company (as defined in section 291(b)(4)) which has an 
     average daily worldwide production of crude oil of at least 
     500,000 barrels for the taxable year in any taxable year 
     beginning after December 31, 2005.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.

  (Purpose: To reinstate for millionaires a top individual income tax 
 rate of 39.6 percent, the pre-May 2003 rates of tax on capital gains 
and dividends, and to repeal the reduction and termination of the phase 
     out of personal exemptions and overall limitation on itemized 
      deductions, until the Federal budget deficit is eliminated)

       At the end of the bill, insert the following:

     SEC. __. REINSTATEMENT FOR MILLIONAIRES OF 39.6 PERCENT 
                   INCOME TAX RATE, PRE-MAY 2003 CAPITAL GAIN AND 
                   DIVIDEND RATES, AND DEDUCTION LIMITATIONS UNTIL 
                   BUDGET DEFICIT ELIMINATED.

       (a) Repeal of Top Income Tax Rate Reductions.--
       (1) In general.--Section 1(i) (relating to rate reductions) 
     is amended by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4) 
     and by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new 
     paragraph:
       ``(3) Exception for taxpayers with taxable income of 
     $1,000,000, or more.--Notwithstanding paragraph (2), in the 
     case of taxable years beginning in a calender year after 
     2005, the last item in the fourth column of the table under 
     paragraph (2) shall be applied by substituting `39.6%' for 
     `35.0%' with respect to taxable income in excess of 
     $1,000,000 ($500,000 in the case of taxpayers to whom 
     subsection (d) applies).''.
       (2) Effective date.--The amendment made by this subsection 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       (3) Application of egtrra sunset.--The amendment made by 
     this subsection shall be subject to title IX of the Economic 
     Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 to the same 
     extent and in the same manner as the provision of such Act to 
     which such amendment relates.
       (b) Restoration of Pre-May 2003 Tax Rates on Capital Gains 
     and Dividends for Individuals In Top Rate Bracket.--
       (1) In general.--Section 1(h) is amended by adding at the 
     end the following new paragraph:
       ``(12) Increased rates for individuals in the top rate 
     bracket.--
       ``(A) Dividends.--In no event shall the qualified dividend 
     income of a taxpayer for any taxable year exceed the excess 
     (if any) of--
       ``(i) the minimum dollar amount to which the 39.6 rate 
     applies under subsection (i) for the taxable year, over
       ``(ii) taxable income, reduced by adjusted net capital gain 
     (determined without regard to this paragraph).
       ``(B) Capital gains.--If a taxpayer has a net capital gain 
     for any taxable year, the taxpayer's tax shall be increased 
     by an amount equal to 5 percent of the lesser of--
       ``(i) the taxpayer's adjusted net capital gain, determined 
     after application of subparagraph (A) and by only taking into 
     account gain or loss properly allocable to the portion of the 
     taxable year after December 31, 2005, or
       ``(ii) taxable income in excess of the minimum dollar 
     amount to which the 39.6 rate applies under subsection (i) 
     for the taxable year.''
       (2) Application to minimum tax.--Section 55(b)(3) is 
     amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: 
     ``The rules of section 1(h)(12) shall apply for purposes of 
     this paragraph.''
       (3) Effective dates.--
       (A) Capital gains.--Section 1(h)(12)(B) of the Internal 
     Revenue Code of 1986 (as added by paragraph (1)) shall apply 
     to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2005.
       (B) Dividend rates.--Section 1(h)(12)(A) of such Code (as 
     added by paragraph (1)) shall apply to dividends received 
     after December 31, 2005.
       (4) Application of jgtrra sunset.--The amendment made by 
     this subsection shall be subject to section 303 of the Jobs 
     and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 to the same 
     extent and in the same manner as the provision of such Act to 
     which such amendment relates.
       (c) Repeal of the Scheduled Phase Out and Termination of 
     the Limitations on Personal Exemptions and Itemized 
     Deductions.--
       (1) Repeal.--
       (A) Personal exemptions.--Section 1(d)(3) is amended by 
     adding at the end the following:
       ``(6) Reduction of phase out and termination not to 
     apply.--Subparagraphs (E) and (F) shall not apply to a 
     taxpayer whose adjusted gross income for the taxable year 
     exceeds $1,000,000 ($500,000 in the case of a married 
     individual filing a separate return).''
       (B) Itemized deductions.--Section 68 is amended by adding 
     at the end the following:
       ``(h) Reduction of Phase Out and Termination Not to 
     Apply.--Subsections (f) and (g) shall not apply to a taxpayer 
     whose adjusted gross income for the taxable year exceeds 
     $1,000,000 ($500,000 in the case of a married individual 
     filing a separate return).''
       (2) Effective date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.

[[Page 26995]]

       (3) Application of egtrra sunset.--The amendments made by 
     this section shall be subject to title IX of the Economic 
     Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 to the same 
     extent and in the same manner as the provision of such Act to 
     which such amendment relates.
       (d) Sunset of Amendments if Budget Deficit Eliminated.--
       (1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall 
     not apply to taxable years beginning after the first calendar 
     year for which the certification described in paragraph 
     (2)(B) is made.
       (2) Estimates and certification.--
       (A) In general.--Not later than October 15 of each calendar 
     year beginning after 2005, the Director of the Office of 
     Management and Budget, in consultation with the Secretary of 
     the Treasury, shall estimate--
       (i) the Federal budget deficit for the fiscal year ending 
     in the calendar year, and
       (ii) the Federal budget deficit for the fiscal year 
     beginning in the calendar year (determined as if the 
     amendments made by this section were not in effect for 
     taxable years beginning in the following calendar year).
       (B) Certification.--The Director of the Office of 
     Management and Budget shall certify to the President of the 
     United States and to the Congress the first calendar year for 
     which the Director estimates under subparagraph (A) that 
     there will be no Federal budget deficit for both of the 
     fiscal years for which the estimate was made.


                           Amendment No. 2609

  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, this amendment would strike a tax 
incentive from the books for the oil and gas companies that allows them 
to expense their exploration and development costs.
  This tax credit is unnecessary, not because I say that it is, but 
because the oil companies have said they do not need it. The President 
of the United States has said the oil companies do not need it, and the 
Joint Committee on Taxation estimates this tax credit costs the Federal 
Treasury $2.4 billion over 5 years.
  I wish to make clear that this amendment only repeals the credit for 
the major integrated oil companies--ExxonMobil, Shell, BP, Chevron, and 
ConocoPhillips. This tax credit allows major oil companies, such as the 
ones I have just mentioned, to deduct 70 percent of their drilling 
costs up front, then the next 30 percent over the course of 5 years. 
Costs that can be deducted include workers' wages, fuel costs, drilling 
equipment, materials, and supplies, et cetera.
  Now, why should the oil and gas industry get special treatment? And 
why should they get tax breaks from the Federal Government when they 
are making record profits? In the third quarter of 2005 alone, the five 
biggest companies earned a staggering combined total of more than $30 
billion.
  ExxonMobil's profits skyrocketed another 75 percent in the third 
quarter to almost $10 billion. Over the first 9 months of 2005, 
ExxonMobil made a profit of $25.42 billion.
  BP made 34 percent more, or $6.46 billion, in the third quarter of 
2005. So far this year, BP has made $18.66 billion.
  Shell's profits soared 68 percent to $9 billion in the third quarter 
of 2005, while making $20.94 billion over the first 9 months of the 
year.
  Chevron's third-quarter profits were 12 percent higher, or $3.6 
billion. So far this year, Chevron made $10 billion.
  ConocoPhillips saw an 89 percent increase or $3.8 billion in the 
third quarter, while making a profit of $9.85 billion over the first 9 
months of the year.
  At the same time this is happening, the Federal budget deficit is the 
third largest in history, totaling $319 billion, and the national debt 
has surpassed the $8 trillion mark.
  In April of this year, President Bush stated:

       With oil at more than $50 a barrel, by the way, energy 
     companies do not need taxpayers'-funded incentives to explore 
     for oil and gas.

  At the joint Senate hearing last week, at which the CEOs of 
ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BP, and Shell testified, Senator 
Wyden asked them if, given the fact that oil prices are above $55 per 
barrel, they needed these Federal tax incentives. They all responded 
``No.'' In fact, Lee Raymond of ExxonMobil stated this: ``No and I 
don't think our company has asked for any incentives for exploration.''
  Now, I see Senator Wyden is in the Chamber, and since I have quoted 
him, I would like to ask him if I have accurately reported what 
happened at this Senate joint hearing with the oil executives.
  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, the Senator from California has accurately 
reported it.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Let me ask this question. Did the Senator get the 
idea from all of the big oil companies that none of them wanted these 
tax incentives?
  Mr. WYDEN. What is so staggering is, when these big oil companies are 
charging record prices, making record profits, they are being given 
record tax subsidies that they show up and tell the American people 
they do not want.
  So I intend to speak on this after the distinguished Senator from 
California is done. But she has an excellent amendment. I say to the 
Senator, you have characterized their testimony correctly.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I thank the Senator from Oregon.
  In essence, Mr. President, this is the biggest handout to the biggest 
corporations in America--as a matter of fact, in the world. We should 
not be giving them a tax break so they can do their job--to drill for 
oil--when they certainly do not need it.
  Again, let me be clear: this is a tax credit for the major oil 
companies only. It should not surprise anyone to learn that these same 
oil companies' effective tax rates were well below 35 percent. In 2001, 
their tax rate was 17.3 percent; in 2002, 5.6 percent; in 2003, 13.3 
percent. This averages out to 13.3 percent over the 3-year period.
  By contrast, 14 industries have higher effective tax rates. The 
health care industry is 22.3 percent; the financial industry, 19.7 
percent; pharmaceuticals pay 21.6 percent; the chemical industry, 20.8 
percent; the computer industry, 16 percent; tobacco and food 
industries, 23.8 percent--and on and on and on, and yet the oil 
companies pay very little.
  So not only are these energy tax incentives taking money out of the 
Treasury, they are also allowing oil companies to lower their effective 
tax rate so that less money actually flows from them into the Treasury. 
That is unacceptable. They say they do not need it. The President says 
they do not need it. And this would essentially correct that situation.
  When this tax bill was considered, the Finance Committee recognized 
this fact and repealed the amortization of geological and geophysical 
expenditures for the major integrated oil companies. It also changed 
the way oil companies with gross receipts over $1 billion can account 
for their oil inventories. The amendment I offer today takes one more 
step in taking away unnecessary tax breaks for the oil and gas 
industry.
  So, Mr. President, I hope my colleagues will join me in supporting 
this amendment. I thank the cosponsors.


                           Amendment No. 2610

  Now, Mr. President, I would like to speak for a moment on the second 
amendment, which I call the millionaire's amendment, which is offered 
to my colleagues by Senator Kerry and me.
  I have never had a millionaire come to me and say: I need a tax 
break. I have had them come to me and say: Frankly, the $100,000 I get 
a year is de minimis to me. It doesn't make a difference to me.
  So I wonder, when we are cutting Medicaid, when we are cutting 
virtually every domestic program we can cut, why millionaires get 
$100,000 in tax breaks a year. It does not make sense. They do not ask 
for them. They do not need them. It does not really make a difference 
to them.
  Our amendment directly targets the budget deficit. It says if the 
budget is not in balance, tax rates for income, capital gains, and 
dividends will return to previous levels, and deduction limits, for 
taxpayers earning more than $1 million. So those taxes would be 
reinstated only for people earning more than $1 million. According to 
the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Tax Policy Center, this 
amendment could increase revenues by more than $100 billion over 5 
years.
  When I came to the Senate in 1992, the debt was $4 trillion. In the 
1990s, we put it down, and by 1998, we achieved

[[Page 26996]]

the first budget surplus in 29 years. By 2001, the 10-year projected 
surplus was $5.6 trillion. Now, it has been said on this floor over and 
over again that projected surplus has been turned into a major 
projected long-term deficit. The Federal budget deficit will reach $515 
billion this year when all trust funds are included. This means over 
half a trillion dollars will be added to our Nation's debt--a national 
debt that has already exceeded the $8 trillion mark. Yet millionaires 
get a $100,000 tax break a year, which they have told me they don't 
need, it doesn't make a difference. At the same time, this debt and 
deficit will fuel a rise in interest rates. There have already been a 
dozen hikes. It will eventually slow down the economy, and it will 
certainly limit job creation.
  In order to cover the costs of our debt, this Senate cut $10 billion 
in health care spending for the poorest Americans. To make matters 
worse, the temporary relief for physicians in the spending bill is 
borne on the backs of Medicare beneficiaries in the form of higher Part 
B premiums. The spending cuts will directly increase, by $2.90, the 
amount Medicare beneficiaries pay each month in premiums in 2007. That 
is a 33-percent increase in monthly premiums. While it is vital that 
Congress prevent future cuts in Medicare reimbursement to physicians, 
the spending cuts amounted to a $1.4 billion tax on seniors. This is 
simply unacceptable.
  I do not think it is a bad idea to say that millionaires might be 
willing to help people on Medicare. They might be willing to provide 
some support for Medicaid so that the poorest Americans could receive 
health care.
  So here is the bottom line: Realistically, there are very few 
millionaires in my State. There are about 28,000--28,000 out of 37 
million people. The number of people on Medicare and Medicaid affected 
by these cuts is in the millions. That is the difference. So if you 
restore this tax for millionaires, it essentially covers the cuts on 
Medicare and Medicaid.
  Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Eleven and a half minutes.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I understand that Senator Wyden would 
like to use some of this time. I would be happy to allot him--how much 
time does the Senator require?
  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I think 7 minutes would be fine.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask Senator Feinstein, would it be OK if I 
use my leader time now?
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Yes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The minority leader is recognized.
  Mr. REID. This doesn't take away from their time, Mr. President.
  Thank you very much. I appreciate the courtesy. It is so nice of you 
to let me do this. I know everyone is waiting to offer their 
amendments. This is leader time. It comes off of the bill.


                                  Iraq

  Mr. President, last night, on the heels of two very bloody days in 
Iraq where 11 American soldiers have been killed, the President and the 
Vice President shamelessly decided to play politics. It was another 
deplorable political ploy from an administration that is growing more 
and more and more desperate and disconnected. The American people and 
our brave soldiers deserve better.
  It seems the President and Vice President have decided to treat the 
war as if it is a political campaign. Instead of giving our troops a 
plan for success or answering the serious questions of the American 
people, they have decided to reignite the Rove-Cheney attack machine.
  We are at war. We need a Commander in Chief, not a Campaigner in 
Chief. We need leadership from the White House, not more White House-
washing of the very serious issues confronting us in Iraq.
  This week, Senate Democrats and Republicans, right here in this 
Senate, voted overwhelmingly to send the President this message: It is 
time to change course in Iraq.
  Instead of heeding that call, the White House continues to dodge and 
to duck the questions of Americans and to smear their opponents. That 
is not leadership, and our troops and the American people deserve 
better.
  Here is what Senator Chuck Hagel said. Now, who is Chuck Hagel? Chuck 
Hagel is a decorated Vietnam war veteran, a man who, in Vietnam, saved 
the life of his own brother. Of course, he is also a senior Republican 
member of the Foreign Relations Committee.
  Here is what he had to say about the administration's tactics. These 
are not my words. They are the words of the Senator from Nebraska:

       Suggesting that to challenge or criticize policy is 
     undermining or hurting our troops is not democracy, nor what 
     this country has stood for, for over 200 years . . . To 
     question your government is not unpatriotic--to not question 
     your government is unpatriotic. America owes its men and 
     women in uniform a policy worthy of their sacrifices.

  He is right. The deceiving, dividing, and distorting must end. Of 
course, this is the same move we have seen from Karl Rove and Dick 
Cheney time and time again. Whenever their poll numbers sink, they go 
back on the attack. This time, though, the stakes are too high to let 
them get away with it. There is more than poll numbers or votes at 
stake. The lives of our brave soldiers in Iraq depend on this President 
coming clean and coming forward with a plan for Iraq.
  President Bush, Vice President Cheney, and Karl Rove must stop the 
orchestrated attack campaign they launched on Veterans Day. It is a 
weak, spineless display of politics at a time of war. It is easy to 
attack. The hard part is leading, coming clean with the American 
people, and giving our troops a strategy for success.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. WYDEN. Parliamentary inquiry: My understanding is that if I take 
about 7 minutes or so to discuss the Feinstein-Wyden, and others, 
amendment with respect to energy, that would still leave the Senator 
from California about 5 minutes to conclude for our side?
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I am happy to yield the balance of my time to the 
Senator from Oregon.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California has 3 minutes 
remaining.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I yield my 3 minutes to the Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. Chairman, I asked for some time. Do I have time, 
then, following the Senator from Oregon?
  Mr. WYDEN. I ask unanimous consent that Senator Feinstein and I have 
10 additional minutes, Senator Thomas would be afforded the same 
amount, so that the total amount for this provision would only be 
expanded at a maximum amount of 20 minutes. I would take 5 minutes from 
our side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask my good friend to cut that down 
significantly. We are oversubscribed in time. It is a zero-sum game. 
Extra time you take means less time for other Senators later on. I urge 
you to modify your request to a much lower number, please.
  Mr. WYDEN. The Senator from Montana is gracious. Does the Senator 
from California need any additional time?
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I am yielding my remaining 3 minutes to the Senator 
from Oregon.
  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, if I could have 3 additional minutes so I 
could speak for a total of up to 6 minutes.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Let's make it 5 and 5.
  Mr. WYDEN. That would be fine.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Oregon is recognized for 5 minutes.


                           Amendment No. 2609

  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, with the CEOs of the major oil companies 
admitting that they do not need tax breaks, Democrats and Republicans 
in the Senate are signaling that it is a new day as far as energy 
taxes. For the first time in 20 years, the Senate is on the brink of 
cutting back on a portion of the billions of dollars in tax breaks the 
major oil companies receive annually.
  The long march toward reforming the energy provisions in our Tax Code

[[Page 26997]]

began a couple of days ago, when the Senate Finance Committee accepted 
my amendment that would limit a brand-new tax break in the 2005 Energy 
bill that would allow the oil companies to get faster write-offs for 
their exploration costs. That amendment was, in my view, a beginning at 
rolling back unnecessary tax breaks. Today, a bipartisan group, under 
the leadership of Senator Feinstein and Senator Sununu, are building on 
that.
  It is preposterous for the Senate to keep voting out tax breaks for 
the major oil companies when these executives go on national television 
and say they aren't needed. At a time when the Low-Income Home Energy 
Assistance Program doesn't have enough funds, at a time when Americans 
are hurting all across the country, I don't know how it is possible for 
a Member of the Senate to stand up and say: We are going to continue to 
dispense tax favors that the oil industry says are not needed.
  What I did in the Finance Committee, what Senator Feinstein is 
building on today, is to say we are going to do a better job in the 
future of targeting scarce resources. In this case we are going to 
limit the tax breaks to the small and independent producers. Even with 
that, the fact is that over the past 2 years, oil companies have 
already increased their drilling operations, as the price of oil has 
skyrocketed from $45 per barrel to over $70. The number of rigs in 
operation and the amount of drilling have both increased by a third 
since 2003.
  Special treatment of oil and gas costs in the Tax Code is exactly the 
kind of special interest tax break we ought to be working, on a 
bipartisan basis, to eliminate. By eliminating this and other special-
interest tax breaks, it will be possible to simplify the Code, help to 
lower tax rates, and, most specifically, let the energy markets work, 
let capital flow to its highest and best use.
  This is a pretty big day in the Senate. Literally for 20 years, the 
Senate has been pouring it on in terms of one tax break after another 
for the major oil companies. If you look at the statutes, the statutes 
are not confining these tax breaks to the small independent producer. 
My legislation in the Senate Finance Committee did just that. I heard 
the pleas of a number of colleagues on the Finance Committee who said: 
Be careful about the small independent producers. I did that. We passed 
it in the Finance Committee.
  Senator Feinstein and Senator Sununu have picked up on that theme. 
This is not going to take anything away from the small independent 
producers, but it is a big first step at reforming the Tax Code and 
keeping taxpayers' hard-earned money, when major oil executives say 
they don't need those dollars for tax breaks.
  I hope the Senate will support the Feinstein-Sununu amendment, and 
take the next step in this effort to reform the Tax Code.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming is recognized.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, here we are again, faced with another 
opportunity to make it more difficult for us to meet our needs in 
energy. Interestingly enough, people on the west coast who need the 
energy more than anyone seem to be pushing for this.
  There is a misunderstanding here as to what has been done. But these 
tax opportunities are particularly the cost of conducting oil and gas 
exploration and production, particularly offshore, the difficult ones, 
the high-cost offshore drilling, the kinds of things we are going to 
have to get into to continue to have it. We have about expanded all the 
regular drilling we can. Here is an opportunity to do something 
unusual. By the way, I think there has been a little misunderstanding 
on the question that was asked. The question that was asked, as I 
understand it, was on geology, G&G, which was in the bill. They said 
they didn't need that. This is not G&G. This is another issue.
  Mr. WYDEN. Will the Senator yield?
  Mr. THOMAS. No, I am not going to yield. Thank you.
  This is a little different issue than we talked about before. If you 
would ask these people, do they need it to do these kinds of drilling 
on the intangibles, that is not geology, which is the one they were 
talking about, the G&G issue that was in there.
  Here again, we went through this in another amendment. We continue to 
do the same thing. We have spent all this time trying to get an energy 
bill out there to try to encourage new ways to look at energy, trying 
to look at new opportunities for energy, all of which are very 
important. Quite frankly, living in a State where we do a lot of this, 
the people who are willing and able to put the investment in these 
kinds of new approaches are not the independents. They are the larger 
companies. They are the integrated companies that are able to do this.
  This continuing idea that somehow these people are too rich--I had my 
chart out here a little while ago, talking about the return on revenue 
and profits. They were down below the middle of all the other 
industries. If we want to talk about taking away windfall profits and 
giving it back to everyone, you are starting with the wrong industry. 
We ought to be talking about the 10 or 12 industries that have a higher 
return on their sales than do the people in this business of producing 
the fuel and the energy we need to keep our economy going.
  If we want to look at having jobs, if we want to look at a growing 
economy, it is very clear. The more we see of it, the more we see of 
having to get offshore oil, the more we see of having to do, which we 
should, conservation and other things, the more important it is for us 
to have an opportunity to begin to continue to move into new sources of 
energy, the ones that are more difficult.
  This amendment is just another one to inhibit that, based on the idea 
that the oil companies are getting too much of a profit. Again, take a 
look at the facts. They are not, compared to others. The return has 
been a reasonable one, and I believe we ought to not adopt this kind of 
an amendment.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  The Senator from Washington is recognized to offer an amendment.


                           Amendment No. 2612

  Ms. CANTWELL. I send an amendment to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Washington [Ms. Cantwell], for herself, 
     Mr. Bayh, Mr. Lieberman, Mr. Schumer, Mrs. Boxer, and Mr. 
     Carper, proposes an amendment numbered 2612.

  Ms. CANTWELL. I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment 
be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To improve the Federal Trade Commission's ability to protect 
 consumers from price-gouging during energy emergencies, and for other 
                               purposes)

       At the end of the bill, insert the following:

             TITLE I--ENERGY EMERGENCY CONSUMER PROTECTION

     SEC. __. UNFAIR OR DECEPTIVE ACTS OR PRACTICES IN COMMERCE 
                   RELATED TO GASOLINE AND PETROLEUM DISTILLATES.

       (a) Sales to Consumers at Unconscionable Price.--
       (1) In general.--During any energy emergency declared by 
     the President under section 3, it is unlawful for any person 
     to sell crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates in, or 
     for use in, the area to which that declaration applies at a 
     price that--
       (A) is unconscionably excessive; or
       (B) indicates the seller is taking unfair advantage of the 
     circumstances to increase prices unreasonably.
       (2) Factors considered.--In determining whether a violation 
     of paragraph (1) has occurred, there shall be taken into 
     account, among other factors, whether--
       (A) the amount charged represents a gross disparity between 
     the price of the crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillate 
     sold and the price at which it was offered for sale in the 
     usual course of the seller's business immediately prior to 
     the energy emergency; or
       (B) the amount charged grossly exceeds the price at which 
     the same or similar crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum 
     distillate was readily obtainable by other purchasers in the 
     area to which the declaration applies.
       (3) Mitigating factors.--In determining whether a violation 
     of paragraph (1) has occurred, there also shall be taken into 
     account, among other factors, the price that would reasonably 
     equate supply and demand in a competitive and freely 
     functioning market and whether the price at which the crude

[[Page 26998]]

     oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillate was sold reasonably 
     reflects additional costs, not within the control of the 
     seller, that were paid or incurred by the seller.
       (b) False Pricing Information.--It is unlawful for any 
     person to report information related to the wholesale price 
     of crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates to the 
     Federal Trade Commission if--
       (1) that person knew, or reasonably should have known, the 
     information to be false or misleading;
       (2) the information was required by law to be reported; and
       (3) the person intended the false or misleading data to 
     affect data compiled by that department or agency for 
     statistical or analytical purposes with respect to the market 
     for crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates.
       (c) Market Manipulation.--It is unlawful for any person, 
     directly or indirectly, to use or employ, in connection with 
     the purchase or sale of crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum 
     distillates at wholesale, any manipulative or deceptive 
     device or contrivance, in contravention of such rules and 
     regulations as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or 
     appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of 
     United States citizens.

     SEC. __. DECLARATION OF ENERGY EMERGENCY.

       (a) In General.--If the President finds that the health, 
     safety, welfare, or economic well-being of the citizens of 
     the United States is at risk because of a shortage or 
     imminent shortage of adequate supplies of crude oil, 
     gasoline, or petroleum distillates due to a disruption in the 
     national distribution system for crude oil, gasoline, or 
     petroleum distillates (including such a shortage related to a 
     major disaster (as defined in section 102(2) of the Robert T. 
     Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 
     U.S.C. 5122))), or significant pricing anomalies in national 
     energy markets for crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum 
     distillates, the President may declare that a Federal energy 
     emergency exists.
       (b) Scope and Duration.--The declaration shall apply to the 
     Nation, a geographical region, or 1 or more States, as 
     determined by the President, but may not be in effect for a 
     period of more than 45 days.
       (c) Extensions.--The President may--
       (1) extend a declaration under subsection (a) for a period 
     of not more than 45 days; and
       (2) extend such a declaration more than once.

     SEC. __. ENFORCEMENT UNDER FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ACT.

       (a) Enforcement by Commission.--This Act shall be enforced 
     by the Federal Trade Commission. In enforcing section 2(a) of 
     this Act, the Commission shall give priority to enforcement 
     actions concerning companies with total United States 
     wholesale or retail sales of crude oil, gasoline, and 
     petroleum distillates in excess of $500,000,000 per year but 
     shall not exclude enforcement actions against companies with 
     total United States wholesale sales of $500,000,000 or less 
     per year.
       (b) Violation Is Unfair or Deceptive Act or Practice.--The 
     violation of any provision of this Act shall be treated as an 
     unfair or deceptive act or practice proscribed under a rule 
     issued under section 18(a)(1)(B) of the Federal Trade 
     Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 57a(a)(1)(B)).

     SEC. __. ENFORCEMENT AT RETAIL LEVEL BY STATE ATTORNEYS 
                   GENERAL.

       (a) In General.--A State, as parens patriae, may bring a 
     civil action on behalf of its residents in an appropriate 
     district court of the United States to enforce the provisions 
     of section 2(a) of this Act, or to impose the civil penalties 
     authorized by section 6 for violations of section 2(a), 
     whenever the attorney general of the State has reason to 
     believe that the interests of the residents of the State have 
     been or are being threatened or adversely affected by a 
     person engaged in retail sales of gasoline or petroleum 
     distillates to consumers for purposes other than resale that 
     violates this Act or a regulation under this Act.
       (b) Notice.--The State shall serve written notice to the 
     Commission of any civil action under subsection (a) prior to 
     initiating such civil action. The notice shall include a copy 
     of the complaint to be filed to initiate such civil action, 
     except that if it is not feasible for the State to provide 
     such prior notice, the State shall provide such notice 
     immediately upon instituting such civil action.
       (c) Authority To Intervene.--Upon receiving the notice 
     required by subsection (b), the Commission may intervene in 
     such civil action and upon intervening--
       (1) be heard on all matters arising in such civil action; 
     and
       (2) file petitions for appeal of a decision in such civil 
     action.
       (d) Construction.--For purposes of bringing any civil 
     action under subsection (a), nothing in this section shall 
     prevent the attorney general of a State from exercising the 
     powers conferred on the attorney general by the laws of such 
     State to conduct investigations or to administer oaths or 
     affirmations or to compel the attendance of witnesses or the 
     production of documentary and other evidence.
       (e) Venue; Service of Process.--In a civil action brought 
     under subsection (a)--
       (1) the venue shall be a judicial district in which--
       (A) the defendant operates;
       (B) the defendant was authorized to do business; or
       (C) where the defendant in the civil action is found;
       (2) process may be served without regard to the territorial 
     limits of the district or of the State in which the civil 
     action is instituted; and
       (3) a person who participated with the defendant in an 
     alleged violation that is being litigated in the civil action 
     may be joined in the civil action without regard to the 
     residence of the person.
       (f) Limitation on State Action While Federal Action Is 
     Pending.--If the Commission has instituted a civil action or 
     an administrative action for violation of this Act, no State 
     attorney general, or official or agency of a State, may bring 
     an action under this subsection during the pendency of that 
     action against any defendant named in the complaint of the 
     Commission or the other agency for any violation of this Act 
     alleged in the complaint.
       (g) Enforcement of State Law.--Nothing contained in this 
     section shall prohibit an authorized State official from 
     proceeding in State court to enforce a civil or criminal 
     statute of such State.

     SEC. __. PENALTIES.

       (a) Civil Penalty.--
       (1) In general.--In addition to any penalty applicable 
     under the Federal Trade Commission Act--
       (A) any person who violates section 2(b) or 2(c) of this 
     Act is punishable by a civil penalty of not more than 
     $1,000,000; and
       (B) any person who violates section 2(a) of this Act is 
     punishable by a civil penalty of not more than $3,000,000.
       (2) Method of assessment.--The penalties provided by 
     paragraph (1) shall be assessed in the same manner as civil 
     penalties imposed under section 5 of the Federal Trade 
     Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 45).
       (3) Multiple offenses; mitigating factors.--In assessing 
     the penalty provided by subsection (a)--
       (A) each day of a continuing violation shall be considered 
     a separate violation; and
       (B) the Commission shall take into consideration the 
     seriousness of the violation and the efforts of the person 
     committing the violation to remedy the harm caused by the 
     violation in a timely manner.
       (b) Criminal Penalty.--Violation of section 2(a) of this 
     Act is punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000,000, 
     imprisonment for not more than 5 years, or both.

     SEC. __. EFFECT ON OTHER LAWS.

       (a) Other Authority of Commission.--Nothing in this Act 
     shall be construed to limit or affect in any way the 
     Commission's authority to bring enforcement actions or take 
     any other measure under the Federal Trade Commission Act (15 
     U.S.C. 41 et seq.) or any other provision of law.
       (b) State Law.--Nothing in this Act preempts any State law.

  Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, my amendment is based on S. 1735 which 
has been sponsored by about 29 of my colleagues. I certainly appreciate 
the fact that this amendment is being cosponsored by Senators Bayh, 
Schumer, Boxer, Carper, and Lieberman. I thank my colleagues for paying 
attention to what I believe is a very important issue for us to address 
before we adjourn; that is, the issue of price gouging and the fact 
that the Senate should say loud and clear that we think price gouging 
should be a Federal crime. That is exactly what my amendment does. It 
creates a new Federal statute to make sure that consumers are protected 
from price gouging.
  How did we arrive at this point? While my colleagues, I am sure, 
would like to adjourn and continue to think about the complications and 
challenges, the American economy is being hurt by the high price of 
gasoline, as we saw this summer prior to Katrina. Certainly, we are 
anxious about the winter months and home heating oil and the costs that 
consumers are going to pay when they get their bills in the next couple 
of months.
  It is important to note that Americans will spend over $200 billion 
more on energy this year than they did last year. That is hundreds of 
billions of dollars coming directly out of family budgets and the 
bottom lines of businesses across the country. The airline industry is 
expected to spend $30 billion more on fuel alone this year, which is 
twice what they spent in 2003. In fact, if you look at what the airline 
industry is expected to lose this year, it is about $9.5 billion. If 
you look at the increase in the expense of fuel costs for the airline 
industry, it is $9.2 billion.
  For the airline industry, there is a high correlation between their 
actual

[[Page 26999]]

loss and the amount they are paying in higher fuel costs. For the 
trucking industry, where diesel fuel accounts for almost a quarter of 
their operating expenses, each penny increase in diesel fuel costs the 
trucking industry $350 million a year. And what about our farmers who 
are obviously on low profit margins--about 5 percent--and their 
challenge? Well, they have had a combination of record diesel fuel 
costs and price increases of fertilizer of more than 20 percent. So it 
makes it very challenging for the American farmer to be competitive in 
this kind of environment.
  What about the Air Force? I know the Presiding Officer is interested 
in the Air Force. The Air Force energy budget is expected to increase 
50 percent this year, costing taxpayers another $400 million. Even the 
Postal Service is paying higher fuel prices, expecting to add another 
$300 million to the Postal Service transportation costs.
  And what about the taxpayers? Well, they pay every week at the pump 
for higher fuel costs and they want us to protect them. But I don't 
know if they know that the taxpayers are even paying more for the 
President's travel. According to reports, the per-hour fuel cost for 
the travel of Air Force One has increased from $3,974 to now $6,029.
  The cost of energy integrated into our economy is costing us all more 
money and at a time when we are seeing oil companies reach record 
profits and billions are being sent to countries such as Saudi Arabia, 
Iran, and Venezuela. I guarantee you do not have our interests at 
heart.
  I am offering an amendment today to say that price gouging is a 
Federal crime and we should pass this before we adjourn.
  Why is it so important to pass new Federal legislation? First, there 
are 28 States in America, the District of Columbia included, Gulf 
States such as Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and Texas, 
that currently have price-gouging statutes on the books. These States 
have taken legal action to try to make sure that gas distributors or 
service stations or oil companies are investigated when allegations of 
price gouging have occurred, and certainly when you have a state of 
emergency as we have had after hurricanes. So these State statutes are 
the very statutes we are saying ought to be in Federal law.
  As to examples of how these have been prosecuted at the State level, 
retailers have been charged with unconscionable pricing attributed to 
an increase in unreasonable wholesale gasoline prices or because 
gasoline, oil, or fuel commodities in general are raised to what is an 
unconscionable price. We based this on what is a New York statute that 
has been upheld in court. I think it is very important to note that the 
Federal court system has taken this term of unconscionable pricing and 
has Federal case law related to it.
  Why did we get to this point? We got to this point primarily because 
current Federal law and the focus of the FTC has been whether there has 
been collusive pricing activities by these oil companies, collusive 
meaning whether they got together and fixed the price.
  That Federal statute gives very little room to investigate and 
examine what I believe are key issues about supply and demand. We hear 
a lot from the oil industry that this is about simple economics and 
supply and demand.
  I guarantee you we ought to be demanding more information about the 
possible manipulation of supply and why supply was exported out of the 
United States at a time when it was so needed for American consumers.
  We need to pass a Federal price-gouging law to make sure that the 
current law on the books does not leave us emptyhanded when coming to 
pursue this issue and to make our point in protecting the American 
consumers.
  This last week we heard from attorneys general at a joint hearing of 
the Senate Commerce Committee and the Senate Energy Committee talking 
about this issue. One attorney general from New Jersey, Peter Harvey, 
who has utilized his own statute on antiprice gouging, told us:

       We need a Federal price gouging statute that applies 
     nationwide to the sale of essential goods and services.

  I am also pleased that the attorney general from New York--as I said, 
we have based this statute on New York law--has also championed this 
legislation in a letter of support that I ask unanimous consent to have 
printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                                                 State of New York


                               Office of the Attorney General,

                                   New York, NY, November 8, 2005.
     Hon. Ted Stevens,
     Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, 
         U.S. Senate, Washington, DC.
       Dear Chairman Stevens: thank you for your letter seeking 
     input on the issue of gasoline price gouging, and in 
     particular whether Congress should pass legislation 
     increasing the FTC's powers in this area.
       In the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, my office 
     received numerous complaints about the escalation of the 
     price of motor fuel. In response, we launched an 
     investigation and demanded information from about 75 gas 
     stations around New York State that had been the subject of 
     complaints. In those cases where retailers appear to have 
     raised prices more than warranted based on their increased 
     costs, we have undertaken further analysis to determine 
     whether these stations have violated New York's price gouging 
     law (New York General Business Law Sec. 396-r). Our 
     investigation is ongoing, and we will vigorously pursue any 
     cases where we determine that illegal price gouging has 
     occurred.
       As you undoubtedly are aware, a consumer's view of price 
     gouging usually is focused locally on rising prices at the 
     gas pump or the increase in heating costs over the previous 
     winter, and their complaints are directed at state and local 
     officials. Thus, retail manifestations of price gouging are 
     best suited to on-the-ground scrutiny that state and local 
     officials can provide.
       However, the marketplaces for motor fuel and home heating 
     fuel are complex, and are international in scope. If a large 
     oil conglomerate abuses its market position during a real or 
     perceived crisis, the effect is likely to be felt in many (or 
     even all) states. Accordingly, there are levels in the chain 
     of distribution where federal assistance would be both 
     helpful and appropriate.
       The FTC is particularly well suited to regulate price 
     gouging in the motor fuel market. As indicated in the FTC's 
     testimony to the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and 
     Consumer Protection on September 22, 2005, FTC staff already 
     actively and routinely monitor prices at all levels of 
     gasoline distribution and, as stated in the testimony, ``[n]o 
     industry's performance is more deeply felt or carefully 
     scrutinized by the FTC.'' Currently, the FTC can act against 
     such companies if they unlawfully agree to fix prices, but 
     cannot act if unfair pricing practices occur simultaneously, 
     but without collusion.
       Recently, it was widely reported that oil industry profits 
     soared during the third quarter of 2005, which includes the 
     weeks when the hurricanes affected the Gulf Coast. The net 
     income of Exxon Mobil rose 75% during that period, earning 
     $9.92 billion in profit, and the profits of Royal Dutch/Shell 
     increased by 68% during the third quarter. The Government 
     Accountability Office (GAO) concluded that retail prices rose 
     faster than the price of crude oil, and the magnitude of 
     these increases suggest that the disruption caused by 
     Hurricanes Katrina and Rita may have been exploited by the 
     major oil companies to levy price increases not directly 
     related to increased expenses.
       For these reasons, I believe that expanded federal powers 
     in this area are warranted. In particular: the President 
     should be given the power to declare a temporary energy 
     emergency at times of threatened or actual disruption of 
     petroleum supplies, such as occurred during the recent 
     hurricanes; declaration of such an emergency should trigger a 
     prohibition against price gouging; there also should be a ban 
     on manipulative pricing practices in the petroleum markets, 
     similar to what Congress recently adopted for the electricity 
     and natural gas markets; and there should be significant 
     penalties to deter such conduct, and both the FTC and state 
     Attorneys General should be permitted to enforce these 
     violations.
       I urge the Senate Commerce Committee to expeditiously 
     consider and pass the Energy Emergency Consumer Protection 
     Act of 2005 (S. 1735), which includes all of these provisions 
     as part of a comprehensive approach to the problem. The bill 
     was introduced on September 20, 2005 by Senator Cantwell, and 
     would provide law enforcement with vitally needed tools to 
     prevent price gouging, as well as allow greater federal 
     scrutiny of possible market manipulation practices.
       Thank you once again for soliciting my input on this 
     important issue. It is essential that Congress, federal 
     regulators and state law enforcement officials work together 
     to prevent the types of abusive pricing practices that we 
     have recently witnessed. By

[[Page 27000]]

     doing so, we will be able to protect motorists, homeowners, 
     farmers and businesses across the country.
           Very truly yours,
                                                    Eliot Spitzer,
                                                 Attorney General.

  Ms. CANTWELL. Attorney General Spitzer says:

       Accordingly, there are levels in the chain of distribution 
     where Federal assistance would be both helpful and 
     appropriate . . .
       Currently, the FTC can act against such companies if they 
     unlawfully agree to fix price, but cannot act if unfair 
     practices occur simultaneously but without collusion.

  I think the Attorney General of New York has it right as to why we 
need this Federal statute.
  We also want to make sure we are recognizing in the next several 
months what further damage is going to happen to the economy if we do 
not act, that is, if we leave here without getting a good Federal 
statute on the books.
  For example, in my home State a farmer from Lamont, WA, wrote to tell 
me that his fertilizer prices have gone up 75 percent since May and 100 
percent since last year, and fuel costs have gone from $2 to $3.15. 
Another eastern Washington farmer told me he is paying more for a 
gallon of fuel than he received for a bushel of grain. So these farmers 
are looking at this issue, and as Senator Roberts said the other day, 
the agricultural industry is facing something like a category 5 fuel 
and fertilizer hurricane. We can't leave these farmers emptyhanded this 
winter as we go away, without enacting a good, strong Federal statute.
  Home heating oil is another issue in which consumers are going to 
feel an impact. For an American family, it is believed that they will 
pay an average of $306 or 41 percent more this winter than they did 
last winter. So we certainly want to implement the Federal statute to 
protect them during these winter months. I can tell you people are 
worried in my State. Unfortunately, our local jurisdictions are doing 
their best, but I think it shows what kind of anxiety Americans have 
about being able to keep warm this winter.
  In my State, in Whatcom County, after the Whatcom County Opportunity 
Council advertised last week they would take up the low-income energy 
assistance applications but would only take 200 walk-ins or the first 
400 phone-ins, they had over 200 people line up outside their doors, 
some people standing outside all night long, just to receive assistance 
from this program, and the local phone service, Verizon, called to say 
that the unusual volume of incoming calls trying to get energy 
assistance basically crashed the system for the entire area. I can tell 
you consumers are anxious about these high fuel costs.
  We are dealing in the Senate with airline bankruptcies and pensions. 
I can tell you the airline industry has been hardest hit by the 
increase in fuel costs. As Southwest Airline CEO Steve Kelly told the 
Seattle Times recently:

       We are now facing energy prices that no airlines can make 
     money at, at least with today's [ticket prices].

  I want to make sure we do not have other pensions that are defaulted 
on, other people losing their jobs or their life savings because we 
have not enacted tough legislation saying that price gouging is a 
Federal crime.
  The amendment I am offering today does a couple of things. First, it 
creates a ban on price gouging during a national emergency declared by 
the President of the United States. As I said earlier, the antiprice 
gouging standard is based on the successfully tested New York State 
statute.
  Second, it gives the FTC and AGs and, because it creates criminal 
penalties, the Department of Justice the authority to levy civil and 
criminal penalties for proven price gouging of up to $3 million and 5 
years in jail. Additionally it puts in place a new ban on market 
manipulation and falsifying information to the Federal Government about 
fuel prices, which is based on a provision of the Energy bill we passed 
here this year related to electricity and natural gas, trying to stop 
the market manipulation that happened in response to Enron and the 
market manipulation in the western energy crisis.
  In addition, the bill gives additional remedies available to the FTC 
to levy fines up to $1 million for violation of market manipulation and 
false information.
  I am very satisfied that this bill has the teeth in it that we need 
in a strong Federal statute to over the next several months give the 
Federal Government, attorneys general, and others the ability to 
prosecute market manipulation of energy prices.
  Why do I think this is so important? My colleagues have been on the 
floor talking about the questions that were asked to oil company 
executives this week, the questions about whether they cared about tax 
incentives or tax breaks, whether they participated in energy meetings. 
My questions were more about the supply of fuel here in the United 
States and whether we have a greater understanding about the protection 
and possible manipulation of that fuel supply.
  Now for my colleagues in the West who have been out on the floor, we 
have reeled from an energy crisis on electricity, and my colleagues, 
Senators Wyden from Oregon and Feinstein from California, all had 
economies that were very hurt by the manipulation of the electricity 
market. In fact, there are some cases in Federal courts now talking 
about the manipulation of natural gas prices. So I guarantee you with 
five refineries in the State of Washington, we are doing our part at 
refining fuel, but we still have some of the highest gas prices in the 
Nation and had those prior to Katrina, so my constituents want to know 
what are we going to do to make sure the prices are not manipulated.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record 
a letter from attorneys general across the country who are also 
supporting my legislation.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                                                November 17, 2005.
     Hon. Ted Stevens,
     Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, 
         U.S. Senate, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, 
         DC.
     Hon. Daniel Inouye,
     Co-Chairman, Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
         Transportation, U.S. Senate, Dirksen Senate Office 
         Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Chairman Stevens and Co-Chairman Inouye: Even before 
     the devastation caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, 
     skyrocketing oil and gasoline prices were taxing American 
     families and burdening our nation's economy--with the notable 
     exception of the oil industry which continued to rack up 
     record profits. In fact, according to the Department of 
     Energy, Americans will spend over $200 billion more on energy 
     this year than they did last year, totaling over one trillion 
     dollars. These expenses seem directly proportional to the 
     extraordinary $33 billion in profits reported by the five 
     major oil companies for the third quarter of 2005. Exxon/
     Mobil alone made an unconscionable $10 billion last quarter, 
     a 75 percent increase over last year. Moreover, the profit 
     that refiners are collecting from gasoline sales has 
     reportedly more than tripled from $7 per barrel in September 
     2004 to over $22 per barrel on September 27, 2005.
       Given the extraordinary impact these energy costs have on 
     families, farmers, and businesses across America, we commend 
     your joint efforts with the Senate Energy and Natural 
     Resources Committee to hold a hearing last Wednesday to try, 
     as Senator Majority Leader Frist put it, to ``examine reasons 
     for high energy prices.'' Given our society's absolute 
     dependency on fossil fuels--whether to power our 
     transportation system, keep our families warm this winter, or 
     countless other uses--both American consumers and the economy 
     are extremely vulnerable to the whims of those with 
     sufficient market power to artificially constrain supply or 
     influence prices.
       As the chief law enforcement officers of our respective 
     states, we are writing to urge you to pass federal 
     legislation that imposes a ban on energy price gouging. Any 
     bill must also provide new market transparency and market 
     manipulation authorities for the President and the Federal 
     Trade Commission to better protect consumers in the future.
       To this end, we respectfully urge the Senate Commerce 
     Committee to expeditiously consider and pass Senate Bill 
     1735. While 28 states already have price gouging laws on the 
     books, the Energy Emergency Consumer Protection Act of 2005 
     introduced by Senator Maria Cantwell on September 20, 2005 
     and cosponsored by nearly a third of the U.S. Senate, in our 
     opinion would provide law enforcement with vitally needed 
     tools to prevent price gouging. S. 1735 would also finally 
     shine a bright light on the practices of oil companies and 
     refiners--a sector of the economy that historically has not 
     received close

[[Page 27001]]

     scrutiny from federal or state regulators. In addition, we 
     strongly support section five which empowers States with the 
     authority to pursue civil actions on behalf of their 
     residents for violations of price gouging prohibitions.
       We look forward to working with you on this critical issue 
     to the American public and our nation's economy. With ninety 
     percent of Americans believing price gouging is occurring at 
     the pumps, we have a responsibility to do everything we can 
     to ensure it is not taking place. We believe the Energy 
     Emergency Consumer Protection Act of 2005 can do that. Even 
     if we determine that there is no market manipulation going 
     on, then it would be a case of ``no harm, no foul.'' Passage 
     will help assure the public that government is providing the 
     oversight they demand.
           Sincerely,
         Eliot Spitzer, New York Attorney General; Lisa Madigan, 
           Illinois Attorney General; Bill Lockyer, California 
           Attorney General; J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Maryland 
           Attorney General; Tom Reilly, Massachusetts Attorney 
           General; Peggy Lautenschlager, Wisconsin Attorney 
           General; Patricia Madrid, New Mexico Attorney General; 
           Mike Beebe, Arkansas Attorney General; Richard 
           Blumenthal, Connecticut Attorney General.

  Ms. CANTWELL. I am also submitting this letter for the Record because 
I think the attorneys general who are chief law enforcement officers 
across the country for their individual States said it well. If there 
is no market manipulation going on, then no harm, no foul. It does not 
mean this is an automatic incrimination; it simply means we have a good 
Federal statute in place. I certainly appreciate the support of those 
attorneys general who have signed this letter in support of this 
legislation.
  What we found in our hearings--and the attorney general of Arizona 
brought this up--is over the last several years the oil industry has 
moved to a new inventory prop called ``just-in-time inventory.'' Just-
in-time inventory is a great idea for the oil industry because it 
actually saves them dollars because they don't have the same amount of 
inventory they used to. It used to be that oil companies had a 20 to 
30-day supply inventory. Now they only have about 3 to 5 days of 
supply. You can imagine if you only have 3 to 5 days of supply versus 
30 days of supply, the price is going to be different.
  Here is what Attorney General Terry Goddard said:

       Just in time delivery almost leaves no cushion when 
     supplies are delayed.

  He testified that:

       The entire oil industry has moved to this just in time 
     delivery system vastly reducing the number of refineries 
     available on a nationwide basis and minimizing inventories at 
     stage site. The effect is a constant and precarious supply-
     demand balance which is exceedingly beneficial to the 
     industry in lowering operating costs but harmful to consumers 
     so that supply is set at a fragile stage where price spikes 
     can occur.

  I applaud the attorney general from Arizona for pointing out how 
important this inventory issue is and how it ought to be investigated. 
The Energy Department itself had a similar analysis. It found in a 2003 
study:

       The reduction of spare capacity has helped drive up the 
     price at the pump and leaves the market vulnerable to 
     shortages caused by plant breakdown or other unpredictable 
     events.

  So even the Department of Energy knows the supply issue is what can 
drive price spikes. But what we want to know is whether oil companies 
are purposely exporting product. I asked a question at the hearing I 
thought was very important; that is, have oil companies ever exported 
oil products to foreign countries for a cheaper profit than they would 
have gotten if they would have kept the supply in the United States?
  The reason I asked this question is because I wanted to know if they 
were artificially trying to limit supply in the United States just to 
drive up the price. One would think that is not something they would 
do. They, obviously, want to sell in the United States. There is one 
case in the West that we have been very sensitive to, according to the 
Oregonian newspaper that has reviewed what had been secret reports and 
documents basically found that BP/Amoco systematically jacked up west 
coast oil prices by exporting Alaskan crude oil to Asia for less than 
it could have sold it to U.S. refineries. So there is a specific 
example where an oil company exported product for cheaper profits just 
to have less supply in the United States to drive up the overall 
market. That, I think, is exactly what my amendment is trying to get 
at.
  According to the Department of Energy, between January and August of 
this year, over 48 million barrels of refined product was exported out 
of the United States. As my friend, the Senator from Wisconsin, Mr. 
Kohl, points out, that is 24 times the amount that is stored in the 
Northeast heating oil reserve, a critical safety net in times of 
shortage.
  One can imagine that my colleagues want answers to why they would 
export 48 million barrels of refined product at a time when, if you 
would have kept it in a heating oil reserve for the Midwest, it might 
actually keep prices down in the Midwest this winter.
  As I said, I have already had enough of this as it relates to Enron. 
In 2001 I sat in a lot of hearings in the Energy Committee and heard 
from a lot of different people testifying that the electricity market 
had nothing to do with manipulation. It was all about the fact that 
some environmental laws prevented us from building enough supply.
  After 3\1/2\ years of investigation, we found out there was a lot of 
manipulation going on that terms such as Fat Boy, Get Shorty, and 
Ricochet were schemes perpetrated on the consumers of the western 
energy market just to manipulate supply. So you can bet we want to know 
whether supply is being manipulated in a similar fashion in oil markets 
today, and we want answers.
  The only way to get answers is to put a new Federal statute on the 
books that says price gouging is a Federal crime and to give the 
Federal agencies the tools to prosecute that crime.
  I feel very strongly that this body needs to act on this legislation 
before we adjourn. We need to get this to the President's desk and get 
it signed.
  I know my colleagues are going to offer amendments about various tax 
proposals and tax incentives, whether the oil industry wants those or 
doesn't. But I care about what is happening to the consumer, to the 
American farmer who is really getting squeezed out of his family farm, 
to those flight attendants and pilots who are losing their pensions 
because we have seen a 293-percent increase in jet fuel costs over 5 
years, and to the small businesses in my State that can't exist on low 
profit margins when they see a 50-percent increase in home heating and 
fuel costs. So I want to protect consumers, not just now, but if this 
crisis happens again in the future, I want consumers to be protected.
  I hope we can pass this legislation in a good bipartisan effort, that 
my colleagues will support every effort right now to protect consumers 
as we head toward the winter months, and we act responsibly in giving 
Federal regulators the statutes they need to prosecute these crimes.
  Mr. President, I also would like to add Senators Clinton and Salazar 
as cosponsors of the amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Ms. CANTWELL. I reserve the remainder of my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield myself such time as I might 
consume. This is for the purpose of addressing two amendments before 
the Senate. I wish to make a short comment on the amendment that was 
just proposed by Senator Cantwell.
  In regard to this amendment, what she terms the anti-gouging 
amendment, obviously I can't help but say the intent of the amendment 
might be good, but this is a tax relief bill that is before us. It is 
not a crime bill before the Senate right now.
  We just received a copy of the amendment. There are all kinds of 
policy questions that need to be considered. So because of this and the 
fact that it is not germane to the bill, I will be raising a point of 
order at the appropriate time.


                           Amendment No. 2610

  I also wish to make a comment on the amendment proposed about a half

[[Page 27002]]

hour ago by Senator Feinstein. Before I go into the problems behind the 
Feinstein amendment, let me say that it is unfortunate that our Nation 
has had to respond to so many unexpected crises over the past 4 years. 
Most recently, we have had to provide an enormous amount of hurricane 
relief to families in many of our Southern States. Despite this fact, 
our economy is growing and continues to grow and, even considering the 
hurricanes, growing at a rate that nobody would have anticipated 
considering a possible ripple effect that presumably is not rippling as 
much as we thought through the economy because of that natural 
disaster.
  As far as Federal receipts are concerned, these are up $275 billion 
over the prior year, and Federal revenues are returning to their 
average level of GDP. That average level, if you want a little leeway, 
is somewhere between 17 percent of GDP and 19 percent of GDP, and that 
is not just recently, that would be a 50-year average where all Federal 
taxes coming into the Federal Treasury have fallen within that band. 
Also, it has been our policy, at least in this administration, to do 
tax policy that falls within that band of 17 to 19 percent of gross 
domestic product.
  I would like to take a look at the tax increase that Senator 
Feinstein put on the table. It would increase the top rate by almost 5 
percent for ordinary income.
  The premise of Senator Feinstein's position seems to be that 
taxpayers in the top brackets are solely Park Avenue millionaires, that 
somehow these people are sitting around clipping coupons and drawing 
all the income from them. The facts show differently, so I would like 
to go to the facts that are put out by the nonpartisan people in the 
Treasury Department.
  About 80 percent of the benefits of the top ordinary income tax rate 
go to taxpayers with small business ownership. Those of us from the 
heartland know that the definition of small business is not determined 
by some gross revenue taxable income that is used as a basis and the 
arguments for this amendment. It depends upon whether the business is 
locally based. It depends on where the business finances its growth 
from its earnings.
  The people who own these businesses are drawn from the community. 
They go to the local church. They support the local little leagues. 
Small business, as I see it, and as I know it coming from a Midwestern 
State, is a very stabilizing yet very dynamic social and economic force 
in their respective communities and tends to be the bulwark of the 
strength of the American middle class.
  Small business income is generally taxed at an individual rate. In 
most cases, owners of small businesses put the income of the small 
business on his or her tax return. As a practical matter, then, the 
individual tax rate is the rate that is paid by these small businesses 
as opposed to the corporate rate.
  The corporate tax rate, with some exceptions, in the case of some 
older, smaller corporations, generally applies to big business. The 
relationship between the top individual rate and the top corporate rate 
then has a bearing on our policy toward small business and whether or 
not we are going to give small business the incentives to grow and 
create jobs because these people create 70 percent of the new jobs in 
America.
  If the top individual marginal tax rate is higher than the top 
corporate marginal rate tends to be--it is very obvious that you can 
quantify it--then we are sending a bad signal to small business.
  Before 2001, the top marginal rate for small business was 39.6 
percent, the rate that Senator Feinstein's amendment would return us 
to. The top corporate rate is 35 percent. When you look at the 
difference, that is about a 15-percent difference between the top rate 
for big corporations and the rate that is used for a small business 
that is not incorporated.
  So small business was paying then, before we made these changes in 
2001, about 15 percent more. It is what I call a 15-percent small 
business tax penalty. When you tax labor, when you tax business--the 
old principle, you tax more and you get less of it, that was the law at 
that time.
  We recognized the detrimental impact that was having on the economy. 
So we looked at the Federal tax policy bias against small business, and 
then we had a bipartisan majority in this Senate, including Senator 
Baucus, the ranking Democrat, and one-fourth of the Democratic caucus 
at that particular time voted to gradually--because we couldn't do it 
all at once--gradually equalize the top marginal rate between big 
corporate business and small unincorporated business, small 
unincorporated business paying the individual rate that was 15 percent 
higher, a 15-percent small business tax penalty, something that common 
sense ought to dictate is totally unfair.
  Since 2003, for the first time in many years, the top rate, 35 
percent, has been the same for Fortune 500 companies incorporated, 
obviously, as for successful small businesses that file the individual 
return.
  Senator Feinstein's amendment would take the first step to restore 
and perhaps even enhance the 15-percent penalty on small business.
  With all the appetite for taxing and spending around here, rest 
assured, small business will be facing even higher taxes.
  Small business creates 70 to 80 percent of the jobs in this country. 
Why, then, at this time would any Member of this body want to raise 
taxes on people for their ingenuity and their willingness to take a 
gamble in creating a small business? Why would they want to do that to 
people who create 80 percent of the new jobs in America?
  So, without a doubt, anyone voting for Senator Feinstein's amendment 
is, in effect, saying they support raising taxes on these small 
business people who create 70 to 80 percent of the new jobs in America.
  That does not pass the commonsense test. In 2003, it is worth noting 
that the business community told us reducing the top rate of taxation 
was their tax policy priority. The small business community told us, 
when we were writing this legislation, that doing away with this 15-
percent penalty, the small business tax penalty, was their top 
priority.
  Now let's think about this. There seems to be a link between tax 
relief, economic growth, and jobs. Taxes make a difference. They make a 
difference whether we are going to have economic growth. Without 
economic growth, there is no increase in jobs. We have seen evidence of 
that linkage since 2003. Economic statistics prove that when tax relief 
kicked in, the economy has grown and more jobs have been created. That 
is the dynamic of the American free market economic system.
  Public policy made by Congress makes a difference, and reducing taxes 
on small business, or at least making sure there is not a penalty 
against small business vis-a-vis major corporations, have a great deal 
to do with whether the free market system works. So that tax policy has 
helped the enhancement of our economy.
  We are in the process of thinking about reversing that course. 
Whether it is intended or not, that is the impact of Senator 
Feinstein's amendment. Some would speculate that for the minority 
party--and that is the Democratic Party--it is good politics for the 
economy to go into the tank; raise taxes as the economy is coming back 
and economic growth will be stifled. If economic growth is stifled, 
then jobs will disappear. If jobs disappear, then voters are more apt 
to throw out members of the President's party, members of the 
Republican Party.
  I am not that cynical. I do not believe some of the opposition would 
want to put short-term political advantages over the economic well-
being of their constituents, but obviously that is the impact of this 
amendment. So it does make one wonder what everything is about as we 
deal with these issues.
  To sum up, a vote for the amendment by the Senator from California is 
a vote that will increase taxes. It is a tax increase that comes during 
economic recovery. I remind people of a quote from somebody who people 
listen to more than anybody else on how the economy is going and they 
respect

[[Page 27003]]

what he says, Chairman Greenspan. He says that the reason we have had 
these 2\1/2\ to 3 years of economic recovery is because of the tax 
policies that have been put in place in the recent couple of tax bills.
  So we do not want a tax increase when we have a recovery. It is a tax 
increase on the folks that create jobs in America, and that is our 
hard-working small business owners. For those reasons, I ask that we 
reject the Feinstein amendment.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Martinez). Who yields time?
  The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I believe that there is still time 
remaining so that Senator Cantwell has an opportunity to speak on her 
amendment. In the meantime, I ask unanimous consent that the next 
amendments in order following the Cantwell amendment be the following: 
an amendment by the Senator from Illinois on FEMA, 30 minutes equally 
divided; the Senator from Massachusetts, Mr. Kennedy, on poverty, 30 
minutes equally divided; an amendment from the Senator from Rhode 
Island, Mr. Reed, 20 minutes equally divided; and an amendment by the 
Senator from Oklahoma, Mr. Coburn, on the practice of medicine--there 
is no time limit at the moment on that one--and that thereafter there 
be 30 minutes equally divided on the Dorgan amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I do not see the Senator from Washington on the floor to 
finish with her amendment. I ask that her time be reserved so she can 
offer it at an appropriate time, and the same for the time in 
opposition. So we can now proceed with the Senator from Illinois.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The 
Senator from Illinois.


                           Amendment No. 2605

  Mr. OBAMA. I call up amendment No. 2605 and ask for its immediate 
consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Illinois [Mr. Obama], for himself and Mr. 
     Coburn, and Mr. Lautenberg proposes an amendment numbered 
     2605.

  Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading of 
the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: Expressing the sense of the Senate that the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency should immediately address issues relating to no-bid 
                              contracting)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

     SEC. __. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON USE OF NO-BID CONTRACTING BY 
                   FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY.

       (a) Findings.--The Senate finds that--
       (1) on September 8, 2005, the Federal Emergency Management 
     Agency announced that it had awarded 4 contracts for 
     emergency housing relief following Hurricane Katrina to The 
     Shaw Group of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Fluor Corporation of 
     Aliso Viejo, California, Bechtel National of San Francisco, 
     California, and CH2M Hill of Denver, Colorado;
       (2) these contracts were awarded with no competition from 
     other capable firms, and up to $100,000,000 in taxpayer funds 
     were authorized for each of these contracts;
       (3) in the midst of concerns about abusive and 
     irresponsible spending of taxpayer funds, the Federal 
     Emergency Management Agency pledged to re-bid these 
     noncompetitive contracts, with Acting Under Secretary of 
     Emergency Preparedness and Response, R. David Paulison, 
     stating before the Committee on Homeland Security and 
     Government Affairs of the Senate that ``[a]ll of these no-bid 
     contracts, we are going to go back and re-bid'';
       (4) the Federal Emergency Management Agency has yet to 
     reopen these 4 contracts to competitive bidding, and declared 
     on November 11, 2005, that these contracts would not be 
     reopened for bidding until February 2006;
       (5) by February 2006, the majority of the contracts will 
     have been completed and the majority of taxpayer funds will 
     have been spent;
       (6) large and politically-connected firms continue to 
     benefit from no-bid and limited-competition contracts, and 
     contracts are not being awarded to capable, local companies;
       (7) according to an analysis in the Washington Post, 
     companies outside the States most affected by Hurricane 
     Katrina have received more than 90 percent of the Federal 
     contracts for recovery and reconstruction;
       (8) the monitoring of Federal contracting practices remains 
     difficult, with a report by the San Jose Mercury News stating 
     ``The database of contracts is incomplete. Information 
     released by Federal agencies is spotty and sporadic. And 
     disclosure of many no-bid contracts isn't required by law''; 
     and
       (9)(A) there is currently no Chief Financial Officer 
     charged with monitoring the flow of all funds to the affected 
     areas; and
       (B) the task of financial management is spread across 
     disparate Federal departments and agencies with inadequate 
     oversight of taxpayer funds.
       (b) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate 
     that the Federal Emergency Management Agency should--
       (1) immediately rebid noncompetitive contracts entered into 
     following Hurricane Katrina, consistent with the commitment 
     of the Agency made on October 6, 2005, before millions of 
     taxpayer dollars are wasted on irresponsible and inefficient 
     spending;
       (2)(A) immediately implement the planned competitive 
     contracting strategy of the Agency for recovery work in all 
     current and future reconstruction efforts; and
       (B) in carrying out that strategy, should prioritize local 
     and small disadvantaged businesses in the contracting and 
     subcontracting process; and
       (3) immediately after the awarding of a contract, publicly 
     disclose the amount and competitive or noncompetitive nature 
     of the contract.

  Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane 
Katrina, there was an enormous urgency, not only in Congress but all 
across the Nation, to respond to the needs of the people of the gulf 
coast region. Although the sense of urgency appears to have subsided, 
unfortunately, somewhat in Congress, that sense of urgency remains all 
too real for the hundreds of thousands of Americans who are still 
dealing with the loss of jobs, the loss of family, and the loss of 
homes that too many Hurricane Katrina survivors have suffered.
  I am pleased the bill we are debating today includes tax relief for 
those affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. I am fully 
supportive of those provisions. I also believe that before we go home 
for Thanksgiving to enjoy our homes and our families, we need to take 
some meaningful action to help those who might not have as much to be 
thankful for.
  Nearly 2 months after Hurricane Katrina devastated the people of the 
gulf coast, we are seeing that our Government is still leaving too many 
Americans behind. Let me give some examples. This week, FEMA is telling 
150,000 evacuees who are currently in hotels that they have to be out 
of their hotels in 15 days. Imagine, someone has lost their home, and 
they have 15 days to get out of the shelter they are currently in.
  Yesterday, we heard a story on NPR that shelter residents in 
Iberville, LA, will soon be transitioned to a tent city when the 
shelter closes. That's right--a tent city.
  Thousands in Mississippi are currently living in two-person tents, 
without running water or adequate heat, because FEMA has not provided 
the mobile homes they promised.
  There are concerns that contractors participating in the gulf coast 
reconstruction are exploiting immigrant labor. There are stories from 
Mississippi and Louisiana of immigrant laborers being lured to the gulf 
by promises of good pay, only to be stiffed their salaries and charged 
for their temporary housing.
  In addition to these stories--we are hearing enormous complaints--and 
I am getting them in Illinois, despite the fact that I do not represent 
the region--that local companies are being shut out of the 
reconstruction bidding process.
  According to the Washington Post, companies outside the States most 
affected by Katrina have received more than 90 percent of the Federal 
contracts for recovery and reconstruction. Ninety percent of the 
contracts have gone to companies that do not maintain a place of 
business in the affected States. This is unacceptable.
  The American taxpayers and this Congress provided $62 billion for the 
reconstruction effort precisely so that the people of the gulf coast 
region, including some of the most vulnerable

[[Page 27004]]

citizens of our society, would be left behind no more. Yet right now we 
have no idea where that money is being spent, how that money is being 
spent, why it is not being spent on fixing the problems I mentioned and 
why FEMA is still sitting on nearly $40 billion that has not been spent 
at all.
  Now think about that. The managers of this bill have been struggling 
with the fiscal constraints we are trying to deal with and we have $40 
billion that is not spent and we do not know where the other $20 
billion has gone. There is absolutely no accountability to this process 
at all, no accountability to the taxpayers and no accountability to the 
people who need this help the most.
  I am a freshman in the minority party. I am accustomed sometimes to 
not knowing what is going on around here, but this is, unfortunately, 
one of those situations in which I do not get a sense that neither the 
majority party nor the administration has a clear idea of how our money 
is being spent.
  The Hurricane Katrina contracting process has been rife with problems 
from the very beginning. Rather than use the reconstruction process to 
help companies and workers in the regions most affected, we are seeing 
many of the prime contracts going to the largest contractors in the 
country. These are the same contractors that received reconstruction 
contracts in Iraq and with only a few exceptions they are not the folks 
whose businesses were harmed by the ravages of the storm.
  Small businesses are not being given a fair shake to bid on these 
projects, and it is unclear how many contracts have been provided to 
small businesses. Meanwhile, minority contractors have been left almost 
entirely out of the contracting process. The Congressional Black Caucus 
has proposed good legislation to address some of these problems and I 
hope the Senate will consider it, if it passes the House.
  But let me be clear--this is not simply partisan complaining or 
political point scoring. At a hearing held on November 3, 2005, the 
inspector general of the Homeland Security Department, a Bush 
appointee, said about the reconstruction process: Obligations are being 
made at a rate of $275 million a day in an unstable environment and in 
an expedited manner. When you mix it all together, it is a potentially 
perfect recipe for fraud, waste, and abuse.
  The GAO's preliminary observations indicate that the Army Corps of 
Engineers' $39 million purchase of portable classrooms may have 
resulted in the Army Corps paying more than necessary. The GAO will 
continue to monitor the reconstruction contracts.
  I am certain that we are going to keep on seeing these stories 
surfacing almost daily about how taxpayer money is being wasted, while 
the people who are supposed to be helped are not getting what they 
need.
  One of the most egregious examples of this potential waste, fraud, 
and abuse is in the Government's refusal to rebid $400 million worth of 
no-bid contracts that they already promised they would rebid. 
Immediately following Hurricane Katrina, FEMA awarded four $100 million 
no-bid contracts for reconstruction efforts. Acting FEMA Under 
Secretary Paulison made the following statement to the Senate Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee on October 6, 2005: I have 
been a public servant for a long time, and I have never been a fan of 
no-bid contracts. Sometimes you have to do them because of the 
expediency of getting things done. I can assure you, we are going to 
look at all of these contracts very carefully. All of those no-bid 
contracts, we are going to go back and rebid.
  That is what Under Secretary Paulison said before the Senate Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee a month ago.
  These contracts have not been rebid. In fact, FEMA officials 
testified on November 11, just a month after the statement by Under 
Secretary Paulison, that they would not rebid the contracts until 
February. Here is the only problem: By February, the contracts will 
have been completed.
  Today, I am offering a sense-of-the-Senate amendment calling on FEMA 
to immediately rebid these contracts in a competitive fashion before 
nearly $400 million of taxpayer dollars are spent in an inefficient and 
potentially abusive manner.
  I know this amendment only gets at one element of a multilayer 
problem, but I firmly believe this body must take a stand to ensure 
that these Federal agencies that have been entrusted with such a 
monumental job and so many taxpayer dollars stick to their promises.
  I am pleased my colleague from Oklahoma, Senator Coburn, has joined 
me in offering this amendment.
  Senator Coburn and I have also offered a bill that establishes a 
chief financial officer to oversee the use of Hurricane Katrina 
recovery funds so that we do not have further problems of this sort. 
That bill was voted out of the Senate Homeland Security and 
Governmental Affairs Committee and is awaiting a vote. Unfortunately, 
that bill so far has not seen the light of this floor, so I am forced 
to offer this amendment today to provide some accountability and 
transparency into this contracting process.
  I hope my colleagues will support this amendment. I appreciate the 
time and the attention of Chairman Grassley and Ranking Member Baucus.
  Before I yield the floor, I ask unanimous consent to call up a 
pending amendment that has no number yet, submitted by myself and 
Senator Kerry, filed earlier today by Senator Kerry, which provides 
relief from the marriage penalty and from the military service penalty 
faced by many low-income taxpayers who receive the low-income tax 
credit.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I wonder if we can proceed with the second 
amendment. It was my understanding the Senator had one amendment and 
had a time agreement on it. Other Senators have come up, asking for 
consideration of their amendments. I do not want to inconvenience other 
Senators.
  Mr. OBAMA. I was asked by the Senator from Massachusetts to read 
that, just to get it into the queue.
  At this stage I am not speaking on it, and I am not asking for any 
additional action on it. I just wanted to get it in. If it is a 
problem, I am willing to defer.
  Mr. BAUCUS. All things considered, Mr. President, I think it proper 
not to agree to the request at this point because the Senator from 
Massachusetts already spoke to us about an amendment of his, and that 
is in the queue.
  In fairness to other Senators, I don't want to inconvenience other 
Senators.
  Mr. OBAMA. Fair enough.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield such time as he might consume to 
the Senator from South Dakota.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is the Senator yielding time on the bill or on 
the amendment?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. On the bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On the bill.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I yield off the bill such time as the Senator from 
South Dakota might consume.


                      Iraq And Prewar Intelligence

  Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished chairman, the 
Senator from Iowa, for yielding time off the bill. The issue we are 
debating obviously is one of great consequence, dealing with our budget 
and how we deal with the issue of the deficit and what we do to 
continue to keep the economy growing and creating jobs. That is what 
this debate is about.
  I do, however, want to speak in response to something that was said 
earlier on the floor, also off the bill at hand that we are discussing 
today, and that has to do with the whole situation in Iraq.
  The Democrat leader was on the floor earlier, once again attacking 
the President and the Vice President with respect to the issue of 
prewar intelligence. I think the American people deserve to know the 
facts in this debate. They deserve to know the truth. More important, 
our troops need to know we stand with them, we support them in 
completing their mission in achieving victory in the war on terror.
  What we have seen instead is the Democrat leader come down here and 
accuse the President, because he is standing up and telling the truth 
to the

[[Page 27005]]

American people, accusing him of deceiving and misleading on prewar 
intelligence.
  Where is the evidence? Where are the facts to support those 
statements? The distinguished Democrat leader, as well as many 
Democrats who are still serving in this Chamber, back in 2002 had the 
same information, the same intelligence that the President of the 
United States had, the Vice President of the United States had, all our 
allies had, the United Nations had. Everybody came to the same 
essential conclusion, and that was that Iraq posed an imminent threat 
to the security of that region and the security of the United States, 
and we acted accordingly.
  In this Chamber right here, 29 of the 50 Democrats at that time stood 
up and voted for a resolution authorizing the use of force in Iraq. In 
the House of Representatives, over 80 Democrats joined the Republican 
majority in the House of Representatives in support of the resolution 
for the use of force in Iraq.
  What we are seeing now is an attempt to revise that history. You can 
try. You can disagree with the policy. You can disagree with the 
decisions that are being made by our commanders. But don't come to the 
floor of the Senate and don't go out to the public and attack this 
administration and this President for lying unless you have some 
evidence to demonstrate that.
  There is no proof.
  I believe the troops of this country, and our commanders who are 
valiantly and bravely and courageously leading the effort in Iraq and 
in Afghanistan to win the war on terror, are fighting to make this 
country more safe and secure and to make sure that country has a 
democracy. And all we focus on is the negative.
  What about the positive things that are happening in Iraq? The fact 
is, today Iraq's GDP has more than quadrupled from 2003, Iraq's debt 
has been cut by more than a third from 2003, inflation and unemployment 
rates are down from last year while incomes have risen, Iraq's security 
personnel have doubled since last year, over 1,800 reconstruction 
projects have been finished, including schools and health facilities, 
the number of telephone subscribers has more than doubled since last 
year, and the number of independent television stations has doubled 
since last year.
  We are making progress. It is hard work. The people who know that the 
best are the people on the ground in Iraq, the young men and women in 
uniform who are doing freedom's work.
  I had the opportunity last week to go up to Walter Reed Army Hospital 
to visit with some of the casualties of that war, people who have lost 
limbs, amputees. I have to tell you it is inspiring, absolutely 
inspirational to see the courage and the determination and the spirit 
of these young people who have worn the uniform of the United States 
and have fought for something they believe in. They deserve to have 
elected leaders in this country, people in this Chamber, the Senate, 
and the House who are willing to at least acknowledge the good work 
they are doing and the progress we are making toward winning the war on 
terror, toward creating a democracy and standing up a government in 
Iraq, toward raising an army, a security force that can defend the 
Iraqi people.
  What we do not need is demagoguery and people coming on the floor of 
the Senate and elected leaders getting up and making statements 
attacking the integrity and the credibility and the truthfulness of the 
President of the United States, our Commander in Chief, absent any 
evidence to support their claims. Furthermore, those are the ones who 
on this very floor have made statements in the past supporting our 
effort and concluding, based upon the intelligence that they received--
just like the intelligence the President and the Vice President and all 
our allies and the United Nations received--that Iraq posed an imminent 
threat to the United States and to that region of the world. What we 
are seeing here is the worst of politics, and that is not the conduct 
we ought to have in the Senate or the discourse that we ought to be 
putting before the American people. The American people deserve the 
truth, and the American troops deserve our support.
  I yield.


                      Unanimous Consent Agreement

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I have a unanimous consent agreement 
that I think has been accepted. I ask unanimous consent that at 3:30 
today the Senate proceed to votes in relation to the following 
amendments in the order sequenced below; further, that they not be 
subject to second-degree amendments prior to the votes and that there 
be 2 minutes equally divided between the votes: Dorgan No. 2587; 
Feinstein No. 2609; Feinstein No. 2610; Cantwell No. 2612; provided 
further that at 3 today, there be 30 minutes equally divided for debate 
between the chairman and Senator Dorgan; provided further that 
following those votes, Senator Coburn be recognized in order to offer 
his amendment; further, that all votes after the first be limited to 10 
minutes each.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is 
so ordered.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2588

  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I send an amendment to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Kennedy], for himself 
     and Ms. Landrieu, proposes an amendment numbered 2588.

  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of 
the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The amendment is printed in the Record of Wednesday, November 16, 
2005, under ``Text of Amendments.'')
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I think we have a time limit of 15 
minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Thirty minutes evenly divided.
  Mr. KENNEDY. I ask the Chair to let me know when there is 2 minutes 
left.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair will so notify the Senator.
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, this amendment is a very simple 
amendment. It recognizes that we have had a dramatic increase in child 
poverty in recent years. I think the most dramatic recent exposure to 
that was Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, when the veil was taken off the 
United States of America and we saw so many of those families who were 
unable to leave New Orleans and leave the areas along the gulf because 
they were too poor and they suffered so many consequences that we are 
reminded about the growth of poverty among children in recent years.
  This amendment does a very simple thing. It says for every joint tax 
return where the income is more than $1 million, there will be a 1-
percent surcharge on that income. It will go into a dedicated fund. 
There will be a board appointed by the Members of Congress, and they 
will make recommendations to the President about how those resources 
will be expended.
  The best estimate now is that we could have close to $3 billion to $4 
billion raised in the first year. It will rise over the next 5 to 7 
years up to $5 billion. This is dedicated to reduce the poverty of 
children in this country.
  This chart shows what happened in the period of 2000 to 2004--13 
million children are living in poverty. There has been a growth of 1.4 
million children since 2000.
  We know that in the United States at the present time one in six 
children lives in poverty. This isn't just general, across the country; 
it is reflected with different groups having a higher percentage. We 
find, for example, that children are much more likely to live in 
poverty than adults or the elderly.

[[Page 27006]]

  If we look at who is living in poverty in the United States: seniors, 
9.8 percent; adults 18 to 65, 11.3 percent; and for children, it is the 
highest at 17.8 percent. If you look at who is affected by this to the 
greatest extent, the national average being 17.8 percent, the highest 
is minority children. The national average is 17.8 percent. If you are 
looking at Latinos, it is 28 percent. If you are looking at African 
Americans, it is 33 percent.
  Let us look at this chart where the United States has one of the 
highest child poverty rate in the industrialized world. This red line 
is the indicator of where the United States is in relationship to 
Italy, the United Kingdom, Germany, Scandinavia, Japan, Sweden, the 
Netherlands--all the way down the line. This chart is an indication of 
where we have the highest poverty rates generally, and the highest 
child poverty rates.
  It should not be an enormous surprise that individuals have the 
highest child poverty rate down in New Orleans and along that gulf 
area. Those are the areas which have the highest percentage rate. They 
were high before and now breathtakingly high.
  If we look across the country, this chart shows children living in 
poverty in every State. The States in blue have the highest 
concentration of poverty.
  This is a real reflection of our national priorities. Are we as a 
country going to be indignant? Are we going to be sufficiently 
concerned or outraged about this that we are prepared to do something?
  I must say that in the most recent Appropriations Committee 
conference report, we find that we have basically failed to deal with 
these issues, both from an educational point of view and a health point 
of view. We see reductions in terms of the Head Start Program, title I 
programs, and programs that help and assist disabled children. We are 
finding reductions as well in other health programs.
  This is a way for us to be able to say that in the situation we are 
talking about, those at the highest end of the economic ladder, those 
individuals who have more than $1 million are going to pay a tax. Say 
they are going to pay a tax of $100,000; that is a 1-percent addition. 
This is just 1 percent. This is $101,000.
  With that kind of increase on those who are the most privileged 
individuals in our country, the wealthiest individuals, they ought to 
be as concerned as all Americans are by this staggering situation of 
child poverty in this country.
  We are not going in the right direction, as these charts indicate. We 
are going in the wrong direction. If someone gets up and says, 
``Senator, we are going in the right direction, why do we need this'', 
every economic indicator shows these facts and these statistics are 
getting worse and worse every single year. They are not going to be 
altered or changed by what we are doing here in these budget 
considerations. Investment in these children in and of itself isn't 
going to be the complete answer, but, nonetheless, providing the help 
and assistance in a very targeted way to try to deal with child 
poverty, it seems to me, is an important reflection about what we ought 
to be about here in the Senate.
  I certainly think it has a higher priority than many of the other 
priorities that are included in this legislation, which is going to 
provide some very generous tax reduction for some of the most 
privileged people in our country and in our society. That is basically 
the issue.
  Finally, this is a basically moral issue. There is no great nation 
that can ignore this challenge. It is a defining issue in terms of what 
this country is about. It is a defining issue about what the values are 
for us as a people in this Nation.
  I think so many of the great Judeo-Christian religions and other 
religions talk about the importance of feeding the hungry and clothing 
the poor and seeing to the needs of the least of those among us. This 
amendment is a targeted amendment and provides just that kind of help 
and assistance which is so important for this country.
  I hope the Senate will accept what I call the Child Poverty 
Elimination Fund--as I mentioned, with a board to oversee the fund and 
design the Child Poverty Elimination Plan. It is a downpayment, a 
realistic first step toward achieving the goal of lifting children out 
of poverty.
  In the 1960s, President Johnson talked about the ``War on Poverty'' 
that we are still fighting, but we are fighting and falling further and 
further behind. Clearly, we have made progress over the past four 
decades, through Medicaid, Head Start, food stamps, and other measures 
we have enacted. The poverty rate for all Americans reached a low of 11 
percent in 1973, compared to 19 percent in later years.
  We continued that battle through the Reagan administration with the 
enactment of LIHEAP in 1981 and welfare reform in 1996. But, sadly, in 
the most recent years, we have been falling farther and farther behind.
  I am not going to take the time, because I don't have it here, to 
talk about the growth of hunger in this country in recent years, and 
particularly the problem of growth of hunger among children.
  A 5-year-old named Connor from Massachusetts is one example of what 
is happening to the vulnerable people in our society. Some days, Connor 
pretends to be a ``Power Ranger'' fighting intergalactic evils, and 
other days he is fighting hunger, pretending to be a superhero, taking 
a lot of energy. And sometimes Connor doesn't feel like playing. That 
is when his hunger pangs become his worst enemy.
  It is shameless that in the richest and most powerful nation on 
Earth, nearly one in five children goes to bed hungry every night.
  Now because of Hurricane Katrina, the silent slavery of poverty is 
not so silent anymore. The devastation caused by the storm suddenly 
focused the Nation's attention on the immense hardships low-income 
Americans face each day. We saw the desperate plight of innocent 
children who were born poor and forced to bear the impossible burden of 
poverty.
  In fact, the child poverty rate, as I mentioned, in the States hit 
hardest by Hurricane Katrina was all above the national average. In 
Louisiana, 29 percent of children live in poverty, 30 percent of 
children in Mississippi live in poverty, and 23 percent in Alabama.
  Hurricane Katrina highlighted the struggle of the poor, but every 
State in this country is home to children and families who live in 
poverty. Children in the United States are more likely to live in 
poverty than any other age group. This particular amendment indicates 
what our priorities are.
  Poverty is an education issue because poor children often lack the 
basic nutrition vital to healthy brain development. They have 
difficulty focusing their attention and concentrating in school. As a 
result, they often drop out. Some end up in trouble with the law, even 
in prison.
  Poverty is a civil rights issue because minorities are 
disproportionately poor: 33 percent of African-American children, 28 
percent of Latino children live in poverty, triple the rate of white 
children. How can we possibly keep turning our back on these children? 
We should all feel a greater, not a lesser, responsibility to them. 
Where is our compassionate conservatism?
  Do they understand when Jesus said ``suffer the little children to 
come unto me,'' he didn't mean ``let the little children suffer.'' 
Don't they believe that children are included when he said:

       Inasmuch as you have done it unto the least of these, my 
     brother, you have done it unto me.

  We know how to lift children out of poverty in this wealthy land of 
ours. All it requires is the will to do it and the leadership to make 
it happen.
  The words of Nobel Laureate Gabriela Mistral never rang more true:

       We are guilty of many errors and many faults, but our worse 
     crime is abandoning the children, neglecting the fountain of 
     life. Many of the things we need can wait. The child cannot. 
     Right now is the time his bones are being formed, his blood 
     is being made, and his senses are being developed. To him we 
     cannot answer ``Tomorrow.'' His name is ``Today.''

  It is time for Congress to bring true hope, honest opportunity, 
genuine fairness to children mired in poverty in

[[Page 27007]]

communities in all parts of our country. This amendment will put us 
back on the right track. I urge my colleagues to support it.
  Mrs. HUTCHISON. I ask unanimous consent I be yielded 5 minutes off 
the bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, I wish to speak today on an amendment 
that has been offered on this bill that I very much hope the Senate 
will not agree to.
  The Dorgan amendment, which has been offered, would institute a 
windfall profits tax on the major oil and gas companies. There is the 
belief among many in this country that oil industry profits are 
excessive compared to profits of other companies that do business in 
our country. I do not believe that is the case.
  In the second quarter of 2005, the oil industry earned 7.7 cents for 
every dollar of sales. The average profit for all U.S. industry in the 
second quarter was 7.9 cents for every dollar of sales. Thirteen U.S. 
industries earned higher profits in the second quarter than the oil and 
natural gas industry: banking, software and services, consumer 
services, and real estate.
  The rate of return on oil sales for the third quarter of 2005 is 
slightly higher, at 8.1 cents for every dollar of sales. However, the 
damage to the oil industry caused by the hurricanes will eat into the 
bottom line in future quarters. British Petroleum has estimated it will 
take a $700 million hit to the company's energy production and 
infrastructure from Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita. The 
Congressional Budget Office estimates capital losses from Hurricanes 
Katrina and Rita in the energy producing industries will range from $18 
to $31 billion.
  Reinvestment in infrastructure, both production and refining, is a 
critical issue. My good colleague from North Dakota and I would agree 
on that point. While I am sure his proposal is well intended, the 
impact would be contrary to the goals we all seek to achieve. His 
proposal takes a short-term approach to what is a long-term investment 
issue. Investments in infrastructure in the oil industry are over long-
term windows.
  What we must do is encourage the oil companies to take their profits 
and reinvest them back into exploration, production, and refineries. 
The oil companies seek to invest in refineries, but no one is investing 
in new refineries in America. In fact, there has been no new refinery 
built in America in over 20 years.
  If we are going to have a bigger supply and bring the price of 
gasoline at the pump down, we must have more oil refineries and more 
production. We also need conservation. We also need renewable sources 
of energy. We need new sources of energy. We all agree on that.
  This amendment seeks to single out oil companies, dub them 
``excessively profitable,'' take their profit and give it to the 
Government to spend as it would, rather than letting the oil companies 
keep it and invest it in the infrastructure, production, and refinery 
capacity. That is what will get to the issue we are all trying to 
address; that is, bringing the price of oil down so the price at the 
pump will be lower.
  Senator Schumer has discussed another potential amendment that hits 
at the big oil companies. I realize that is a political thing for him 
to do right now. We are not here to do the political hit and run. We 
are here to do the right thing for our country. We are here to try to 
build more reserves, more production capacity, and more refinery 
capacity to bring the price of gasoline down at the pump and to bring 
the price of energy down for the farmer who is trying to use natural 
gas. The price is rising such that our small farmers are in a tough 
position. What Senator Schumer has discussed doing is instituting a 
double tax on any income made by a company overseas.
  We are severely restricting the ability for an oil and gas company to 
drill in America today. You basically cannot drill off the East Coast 
or the West Coast, nor Florida. We can drill in the Gulf of Mexico, but 
it is very expensive and requires deep drilling. We hope we will be 
able to open ANWR--but right now we are very limited. We need to have a 
supply in our country, with American jobs and more production coming 
back to America. More and more production is going overseas.
  I end by saying, the double taxation of one industry is unfair. If we 
have an oil company and a computer chip company doing business in Italy 
and they pay taxes in Italy, the computer chip company would get a 
credit for that tax paid when it files in America, but the oil company 
would not, thereby paying tax twice. Is that the way to have more oil 
coming into our country and to drive the price down at the pump? I 
don't think so. It is counterproductive.
  I hope the Senate will do the right thing. It may not be the 
political thing, but it is the right thing if we are going to reach our 
goal, which is to bring down the cost of natural gas and gasoline at 
the pump for the consumers and the small business people of our 
country, keeping our economy strong and keeping jobs in America. The 
way to do this is not to single out the oil companies. We must invest 
in infrastructure, more production, and additional refineries. If we 
will help them with a regulatory system that does not penalize them and 
delay construction for 10 or 15 years, we can bring the price of oil 
down. It will be to the benefit of everyone in our country.
  I urge my colleagues to vote against the Dorgan amendment and any 
potential Schumer amendment.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  Mr. BAUCUS. So as not to interrupt the flow, the chairman would like 
to speak on the Senator's amendment first, if that is all right.
  Mr. KENNEDY. All right.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I yield myself such time as I might consume off of our 
side of the Kennedy amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has that right.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I am pleased to be able to report to Senator Kennedy 
that we do not need a board to tell us how to end poverty.
  I quote Washington Post columnist William Raspberry, writing in a 
recent op-ed piece:

       Fatherless families are America's single largest source of 
     poverty. The Annie E. Casey Foundation, ``Kids Count,'' once 
     reported that Americans who failed to complete high school, 
     to get married and to reach age 20 before having their first 
     child were nearly 10 times as likely to live in poverty as 
     those who did these three things.

  The Brookings Institution, obviously a liberal think tank, published 
an analysis of a variety of factors that could reduce poverty. The 
authors from Brookings concluded that the combination of education, 
full-time work, and marriage could reduce poverty rates from 13 percent 
to 17 percent.
  The bipartisan welfare reform bill reported out of the Senate 
Committee on Finance would make substantial progress in helping 
families make progress in areas that we know would reduce poverty. We 
could not get an agreement with the other side to get this legislation 
discussed on the floor. We got it out of the committee in a bipartisan 
way. It deals with the issues of education, work, and marriage.
  Following upon the views of the Brookings Institute and the views of 
the Annie E. Casey Foundation, rather than engage in politically 
motivated efforts, we should work together to implement these serious 
policies of education, of work, and of marriage. Together, by 
implementing these policies, and we know these policies work, we will 
take one giant step toward reducing poverty.
  I don't think Senator Kennedy's amendment is necessary. I yield the 
floor.
  Mr. KENNEDY. I ask if the minority would yield 5 minutes?
  Mr. BAUCUS. No objection.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I listened to my friend from Iowa. This 
is the fact: We have one of the highest child poverty rates in the 
industrial world. I am not saying this afternoon

[[Page 27008]]

how to do it. The Senator from Iowa can have good ideas. The Senator 
from Tennessee can have good ideas. The fact of the matter is, we are 
not doing it now.
  There is significant and dramatic growth of child poverty in the 
United States. I am saying let's do something about it. Give us the 
opportunity to do it this afternoon. That is the point I make.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, under a unanimous consent agreement we 
entered into earlier, we are now waiting for Senator Reed of Rhode 
Island to offer his amendment, and also Senator Coburn to offer his 
amendment. And under the agreement, thereafter, there is time remaining 
on the Dorgan amendment. But while we are waiting for Senator Reed and/
or Senator Coburn, or anyone else, to come to the floor, I will say a 
few words about the alternative minimum tax.
  The bill before us today does extend the alternative minimum tax 
exemption level and provides for an increase in inflation. That is the 
good news. But it is not all good news because there will still be 
about 600,000 additional Americans paying higher taxes next year under 
the alternative minimum tax, sometimes called the stealth tax.
  Why is that? That is because the so-called hold-harmless provision in 
the legislation before us today, or the patch, as some have called it, 
does not hold everyone harmless. For example, for the year 2005, there 
are 3.6 million American taxpayers paying the alternative minimum tax. 
Under the bill before us today, there will be 4.2 million taxpayers 
paying that tax in 2006. That is an increase of 600,000 taxpayers, and 
it is an increase I hope we can avoid.
  The alternative minimum tax, to refresh recollections, was originally 
enacted in 1969. Why did Congress do that? Congress discovered in that 
year there were about 155 very wealthy taxpayers making over $200,000 a 
year but who paid no taxes. Congress felt: Well, gee, that is not 
right; people earning over $200,000 a year at least should pay some 
taxes. So Congress passed the alternative minimum tax. What was once a 
class tax, unfortunately, has now been morphed into a mass tax.
  To refresh your recollection, whenever individuals calculate their 
income taxes, they calculate their income taxes and then they have to 
go through a separate, parallel calculation under what is called the 
alternative minimum tax. Under that separate, parallel calculation, 
there are certain provisions that cannot be deducted, and that includes 
the standard deduction or the personal exemptions, and some others. 
Then you look at the bottom line of the two calculations, and if one is 
higher than the other--it does not make any difference which one it 
is--you pay that higher tax.
  Because these provisions were not indexed to inflation, over time 
more and more people are finding they have to pay this stealth tax, 
this alternative minimum tax. Frankly, if it is not changed by the end 
of this decade, that tax will ensnare about 30 million Americans, a 
majority of who will have adjusted gross incomes below $100,000.
  The Internal Revenue Service National Taxpayer Advocate has 
identified this alternative minimum tax as the most serious problem 
facing individual taxpayers. By the end of the decade, the majority of 
filers with incomes between $75,000 and $100,000 will be paying this 
additional tax; that is, the majority of Americans with incomes between 
$75,000 and $100,000 will be paying this, unless it is fixed.
  In addition, virtually all married couples in that income group--
$75,000 to $100,000--with two children will be paying the AMT by the 
end of the decade.
  Now, I have filed legislation to repeal the AMT altogether. I am 
joined in that effort by the chairman, Senator Grassley, and 20 other 
Senators who have the same view as me. I think we should do it. It is 
clear, though, that repeal is very expensive. But it is the right thing 
to do, and we should do our level best to try to find a way to work 
toward total repeal, and try to find the revenue to pay for it.
  In the meantime, though, we should do all we can to make sure this 
stealth tax does not hit one more family next year.
  As you may know, Mr. President, the House companion bill on this same 
subject, tax reconciliation, which is working its way over here, does 
not in any way address this AMT issue. But it does contain provisions 
to extend the capital gains and dividends cuts for 2 more years. Under 
current law, which we enacted in 2003, deductions will stay in effect 
at least until the end of 2008. Nevertheless, the House in their bill 
made the decision to extend that capital gains and dividends cut for 2 
more years past 2008. But they did not include the alternative minimum 
tax. That is wrong.
  Senator Grassley and I have discussed this. We want to make a change. 
At the appropriate time I think we will make a change to the underlying 
bill so not one more American pays this stealth tax compared to current 
law. As I mentioned, under the bill currently before us, about 600,000 
more Americans will pay it. We feel that is wrong. It is a mistake. We 
shouldn't do that. We will find a way, as the chairman and I have 
found, to make sure not one more American has to pay this additional 
tax.
  Otherwise, I might say that under the House-passed version of tax 
reconciliation, 17 million families will see a tax increase next year. 
Under the House bill, working its way over here to conference, 17 
million families will see a tax increase next year thanks to the 
alternative minimum tax.
  In fact, CRS has found that if the House proposal prevails, next year 
a family with three children, making $63,000 a year, will also be hit 
by this additional stealth tax, the AMT. I believe, and I know the 
chairman believes, and many of us in the Senate believe, this family-
unfriendly AMT should not be allowed to creep deeper and deeper into 
the middle class each year. At the appropriate time, we are going to 
make that change, that adjustment, because it is the right thing to do.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield myself such time as I might 
consume off the bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has that right.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I appreciate the cooperation I have had 
with Senator Baucus in working out some differences on this bill, which 
he has enunciated very well. I look forward to, hopefully, getting done 
what he said before we get this bill through the Senate tomorrow.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in 
morning business, and the time will be off of the bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                                The FDA

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, today is the anniversary of the hearing 
on the worldwide withdrawal of Vioxx, the blockbuster drug that became 
a blockbuster disaster. As chairman of the Committee on Finance, I 
called for this hearing a year ago. The Vioxx hearing turned the 
spotlight on a troubled agency in denial. The type of problems exposed 
during the hearings have proven to be not isolated but systemic.
  Over the past year, my committee staff has investigated allegations 
coming from within and outside the Food and Drug Administration. Brave 
whistleblowers, such as Drs. Andrew Mosholder, David Graham, and 
others, have come forward to expose the too cozy relationship between 
the agency and the drug industry. I can tell you today that problems 
exist not only within the Center for Drugs but extend to the centers 
for devices, biologics, and even into veterinary medicine.
  I am concerned--and every other Member of this Senate should also be 
concerned--about this agency's cozy relationship with industry. To 
further illustrate this problem, I am sending today a letter to another 
drug company that appears too cozy with the Food and Drug 
Administration. Last year, 2 days after the Vioxx hearing, the drug 
company Wyeth met with

[[Page 27009]]

former Commissioner Crawford. Why did Wyeth's CEO want to talk with the 
commissioner? Because Wyeth recently had to remove one of its most 
profitable veterinary drugs from the market.
  So what did Wyeth do? They launched an investigation of a Food and 
Drug Administration employee, Dr. Victoria Hampshire. It was Dr. 
Hampshire who concluded that Wyeth's drug was killing hundreds of dogs. 
I have in my hand what Wyeth presented to former Commissioner Crawford. 
Every page of this document has on it things that are referred to as 
confidential. It is a 29-page PowerPoint with 10 pages of backup 
material. It is dated November 19, 2004. Besides being marked 
confidential, it says:

       ProHeart 6 Apparent Conflict of Interest.

  In summary this PowerPoint alleges that Dr. Hampshire had a personal 
and financial conflict of interest. Dr. Hampshire approached my 
committee staff because she was scared and felt unfairly targeted by 
the Wyeth Company and also by her agency. Why? Because she was simply 
doing her job to check to see if drugs were as effective and safe as 
they were said to be.
  Last week, the Food and Drug Administration briefed my committee 
investigators on this matter. It turns out that Wyeth succeeded in 
having Dr. Hampshire removed from reviewing its drugs. Dr. Hampshire's 
hard work and dedication to science and drug safety placed a bull's eye 
on her back and destroyed her reputation and career--I should say 
temporarily destroyed her reputation. When you hear the end of this, 
she got commendation. Without her knowledge, the Food and Drug 
Administration also launched a criminal investigation against her.
  This sordid story is still unraveling. I can say that no action was 
taken against Dr. Hampshire, and after the investigation closed, the 
Food and Drug Administration rewarded Dr. Hampshire for her work on the 
Wyeth drug, which remains off the market. Unfortunately for Dr. 
Hampshire, Wyeth's efforts to discredit her did not end when the FDA 
cleared her. At least one Wyeth sales representative attempted to 
discredit Dr. Hampshire in the veterinary community. Fortunately for 
Dr. Hampshire, the salesperson's comments about Wyeth's investigation 
of her and her alleged conflicts of interest were made to a former 
colleague of Dr. Hampshire. My letter to Wyeth today seeks information 
and documents related to Wyeth's investigation of Dr. Hampshire and the 
salesperson's comments.
  So a year later, we are still uncovering the cozy relationship 
between the agency and the drug industry.
  In this case, a company had the guts to go to supposedly an unbiased 
regulating agency and tried to get somebody fired, removed, and even a 
criminal investigation against them, do everything to discredit them. 
That sort of culture and environment should not exist in any regulatory 
agency with the economic sectors that they are regulating.
  Dr. Hampshire's sad story is further proof that the Food and Drug 
Administration needs a permanent commissioner who can restore order and 
respect for independence. The Food and Drug Administration cannot serve 
the American people and the interests of the drug industry at the same 
time.
  A year ago, Dr. Graham created a firestorm when he said at the Vioxx 
hearing:

       I can tell you right now, there are at least five drugs on 
     the market today that I think need to be looked at quite 
     seriously to see whether or not they belong there. . . .

  Dr. Graham identified those five drugs: Accutane, Bextra, Crestor, 
Meridia, and Serevent, when asked by my distinguished colleague, 
Senator Bingaman of New Mexico. Some roundly criticized Dr. Graham's 
testimony as inflammatory a year ago. Today it is noteworthy that the 
agency has taken regulatory action or action is pending on four out of 
the five drugs named by Dr. Graham.
  Less than a week after the hearing, the Food and Drug Administration 
announced it was strengthening its plan to reduce the risk of birth 
defects associated with Accutane. Then in August the agency issued a 
public health advisory to help make sure females do not become pregnant 
while taking this medicine and to release more information about 
depression and suicidal thoughts associated with that drug. A month 
after the hearing, December of last year, the Food and Drug 
Administration issued a public health advisory for Bextra. The agency 
announced it changed Bextra's label to provide consumers with upgraded 
warnings about possible heart and blood clotting problems. Ultimately, 
the agency asked Pfizer to voluntarily remove Bextra from the market in 
April of this year.
  Less than 4 months after Dr. Graham's testimony, Crestor was subject 
to a public health advisory as part of the agency's effort to notify 
the public of potentially significant emerging safety data. Crestor's 
label was changed to highlight important information on the safe use of 
Crestor. Eight months after the hearing, the Food and Drug 
Administration convened an advisory committee meeting related to the 
safety of Serevent and other asthma drugs. The advisory committee 
recommended strengthening the labels for Serevent as well, but the 
agency has yet to act. Only one drug, Meridia, has not been the subject 
of any action by FDA.
  American consumers are the beneficiaries of these actions. I don't 
know if the agency would have acted without Dr. Graham's testimony 
before my committee a year ago. But I know from experience that 
sunlight is the best disinfectant. The scrutiny of the last 12 months 
is just the kind of medicine that the Food and Drug Administration 
needs. Things have not turned around overnight. Reforming this agency 
is a long-haul task.
  For those of us in Congress committed to oversight, reform, and 
improvement, the Vioxx investigation and hearings, as well as other 
investigations, prompted me to cosponsor two Food and Drug 
Administration reform bills this year. Senator Dodd of Connecticut and 
I introduced a bipartisan bill, the Fair Access to Clinical Trials Act, 
in February and the Food and Drug Administration Safety Act of 2005 in 
April of this year. These bills represent part of a sustained effort to 
restore public confidence in the Federal Government's food and drug 
safety agency. A number of you have cosponsored these bills with 
Senator Dodd and me. I urge everyone else who hasn't to consider them 
again.
  Enactment of these bills will be a meaningful step towards greater 
accountability and transparency for the Food and Drug Administration. 
And if enacted, they would provide the agency with some much needed 
authority to ensure the safety and efficacy of drugs.
  One big opportunity that absolutely cannot be missed right now is the 
appointment of a new full-time commissioner who is committed to reform. 
This leader must recognize the problems of a culture that has become 
too cozy with the industry.
  Then that leader must be tough enough to make necessary changes 
happen.
  The FDA has to do a top-notch job on ensuring the safety of the 
products it regulates.
  And where the FDA lacks the tools and resources to do so, Congress 
has to step in and help.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent----
  Mr. GRASSLEY. You mean we have used up all the time on our bill? I 
took time off of my bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time between now and 3:30 is equally 
divided between the chairman and the Senator from Montana.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Then I will forget my last three sentences.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  Mr. BAUCUS. I ask unanimous consent that the Senator from Rhode 
Island be recognized to offer his amendment and speak for 10 minutes, 
and the time thereafter until 3:30 be equally divided on the Dorgan 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, my 
understanding is that we have 15 minutes

[[Page 27010]]

equally divided on the Dorgan-Dodd amendment, and that was to start at 
3 o'clock. My recommendation would be that if there is 10 minutes now 
allocated during that period we simply move the vote to 3:40 so that we 
will have the 15 minutes equally divided--30 minutes equally divided.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I amend my request to accommodate the 
request of the Senator from North Dakota. The Senator from Rhode Island 
can offer his amendment, and when he is finished, there will be a half 
hour on the Dorgan amendment. He gets 15, and the other side gets 15, 
and the vote will now occur at 3:40.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Coleman). Is there objection? Without 
objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. REED. Parliamentary inquiry: What is the pending business?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Kennedy amendment is pending. The Senator 
is authorized to set it aside for his amendment.


                           Amendment No. 2626

  Mr. REED. The Kennedy amendment being set aside, I would send an 
amendment to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Rhode Island [Mr. Reed] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2626.

  Mr. REED. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of the 
amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To impose a temporary windfall profits tax on crude oil and 
  to use the proceeds of the tax collected to fund programs under the 
     Low-Income Energy Assistance Act of 1981 through a trust fund)

       At the end of title IV add the following:

     SEC. 410. TEMPORARY WINDFALL PROFITS TAX.

       (a) In General.--Subtitle E of the Internal Revenue Code of 
     1986 (relating to alcohol, tobacco, and certain other excise 
     taxes) is amended by adding at the end thereof the following 
     new chapter:

         ``CHAPTER 56--TEMPORARY WINDFALL PROFITS ON CRUDE OIL

``Sec. 5896. Imposition of tax.
``Sec. 5897. Windfall profit; etc.
``Sec. 5898. Special rules and definitions.

     ``SEC. 5896. IMPOSITION OF TAX.

       ``(a) In General.--In addition to any other tax imposed 
     under this title, there is hereby imposed on any applicable 
     taxpayer an excise tax in an amount equal to the applicable 
     percentage of the windfall profit of such taxpayer for any 
     taxable year beginning in 2005.
       ``(b) Applicable Taxpayer.--For purposes of this chapter, 
     the term `applicable taxpayer' means, with respect to 
     operations in the United States--
       ``(1) any integrated oil company (as defined in section 
     291(b)(4)) which has an average daily worldwide production of 
     crude oil of at least 500,000 barrels for the taxable year.
       ``(c) Applicable Percentage.--For purposes of subsection 
     (a), the applicable percentage shall be determined by the 
     Secretary such that the resulting increase in revenues in the 
     Treasury equals $2,920,000,000.

     ``SEC. 5897. WINDFALL PROFIT; ETC.

       ``(a) General Rule.--For purposes of this chapter, the term 
     `windfall profit' means the excess of the adjusted taxable 
     income of the applicable taxpayer for the taxable year over 
     the reasonably inflated average profit for such taxable year.
       ``(b) Adjusted Taxable Income.--For purposes of this 
     chapter, with respect to any applicable taxpayer, the 
     adjusted taxable income for any taxable year is equal to the 
     taxable income for such taxable year (within the meaning of 
     section 63 and determined without regard to this 
     subsection)--
       ``(1) increased by any interest expense deduction, 
     charitable contribution deduction, and any net operating loss 
     deduction carried forward from any prior taxable year, and
       ``(2) reduced by any interest income, dividend income, and 
     net operating losses to the extent such losses exceed taxable 
     income for the taxable year.

     In the case of any applicable taxpayer which is a foreign 
     corporation, the adjusted taxable income shall be determined 
     with respect to such income which is effectively connected 
     with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States.
       ``(c) Reasonably Inflated Average Profit.--For purposes of 
     this chapter, with respect to any applicable taxpayer, the 
     reasonably inflated average profit for any taxable year is an 
     amount equal to the average of the adjusted taxable income of 
     such taxpayer for taxable years beginning during the 2000-
     2004 taxable year period (determined without regard to the 
     taxable year with the highest adjusted taxable income in such 
     period) plus 10 percent of such average.

     ``SEC. 5898. SPECIAL RULES AND DEFINITIONS.

       ``(a) Withholding and Deposit of Tax.--The Secretary shall 
     provide such rules as are necessary for the withholding and 
     deposit of the tax imposed under section 5896.
       ``(b) Records and Information.--Each taxpayer liable for 
     tax under section 5896 shall keep such records, make such 
     returns, and furnish such information as the Secretary may by 
     regulations prescribe.
       ``(c) Return of Windfall Profit Tax.--The Secretary shall 
     provide for the filing and the time of such filing of the 
     return of the tax imposed under section 5896.
       ``(d) Crude Oil.--The term `crude oil' includes crude oil 
     condensates and natural gasoline.
       ``(e) Businesses Under Common Control.--For purposes of 
     this chapter, all members of the same controlled group of 
     corporations (within the meaning of section 267(f)) and all 
     persons under common control (within the meaning of section 
     52(b) but determined by treating an interest of more than 50 
     percent as a controlling interest) shall be treated as 1 
     person.
       ``(f) Regulations.--The Secretary shall prescribe such 
     regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out 
     the purposes of this chapter.''.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of chapters for subtitle 
     E of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding 
     at the end the following new item:

       ``Chapter 56. Temporary Windfall Profits on Crude Oil.''.

       (c) Deductibility of Windfall Profit Tax.--The first 
     sentence of section 164(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 
     1986 (relating to deduction for taxes) is amended by 
     inserting after paragraph (5) the following new paragraph:
       ``(6) The windfall profit tax imposed by section 5896.''.
       (d) Low Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund.--
       (1) In general.--Subchapter A of chapter 98 of the Internal 
     Revenue Code of 1986 (relating to trust fund code) is amended 
     by adding at the end the following new section:

     ``SEC. 9511. LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY ASSISTANCE TRUST FUND.

       ``(a) Creation of Trust Fund.--There is established in the 
     Treasury of the United States a trust fund to be known as the 
     `Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund', consisting of 
     any amount appropriated or credited to the Trust Fund as 
     provided in this section or section 9602(b).
       ``(b) Transfers to Trust Fund.--There are hereby 
     appropriated to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust 
     Fund amounts equivalent to the increased revenues received in 
     the Treasury as the result of the amendment made by section 
     410(a) of the Tax Relief Act of 2005.
       ``(c) Expenditures From Trust Fund.--Amounts in the Low 
     Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund not to exceed 
     $2,920,000,000 shall be available for fiscal year 2006, as 
     provided by appropriation Acts, to carry out the program 
     under the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981 
     through the distribution of funds to all the States in 
     accordance with section 2604 of that Act (42 U.S.C. 8623) 
     (other than subsection (e) of such section), but only if not 
     less than $1,880,000,000 has been appropriated for such 
     program for such fiscal year.''.
       (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections for such 
     subchapter is amended by adding at the end the following new 
     item:

``Sec. 9511. Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund.''.

       (e) Effective Dates.--
       (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
     amendments made by this section shall apply to taxable years 
     beginning in 2005.
       (2) Subsection (d).--The amendments made by subsection (d) 
     shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.

  Mr. REED. I offer this amendment along with Senator Kennedy, Senator 
Schumer, Senator Kohl, Senator Rockefeller, Senator Kerry, Senator 
Carper, Senator Leahy, Senator Lieberman, Senator Dayton, and Senator 
Stabenow.
  Mr. President, this amendment is about LIHEAP, the Low Income Heating 
Assistance Program. Each of us, at this point, is very familiar with 
the struggle that is taking place today--and if you were outside early 
this morning, you understand temperatures are falling--that many 
families are having to heat their homes for this winter. According to 
EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook released last week, energy costs for 
the average family using heating oil are estimated to hit $1,500 this 
winter, an increase of $325 over last year's heating season. Natural 
gas prices could hit $1,000, an increase of $300. For a family using 
propane, prices are projected to hit $1,300, an increase of $230.
  Despite these sharp increases in fuel costs, we sadly continue to 
fund LIHEAP, the one program that can provide sufficient help, at the 
same

[[Page 27011]]

level as last year, which in reality means an actual cut in the level 
of assistance we can provide low-income consumers this winter's heating 
season.
  The responsible thing for Congress to do is to fully fund LIHEAP at 
the full $5.1 billion authorized in the Energy Policy Act enacted 
earlier this year. Indeed, we have tried to do that--not once but three 
times--in the past few weeks. Senator Collins and I, along with some 30 
of our colleagues, have offered amendments to the Defense bill, the 
Transportation-Treasury-HUD bill, and the Labor-HHS bill to fully fund 
LIHEAP. We have reached across the aisle and across the country to 
provide more assistance for the LIHEAP program, and in each instance a 
majority of this body has gone on record to support full funding.
  Today, I come to the floor to offer another amendment to fully fund 
the LIHEAP program. This time I seek to offset that increase with a 
temporary 1-year windfall profits tax on large oil companies. This tax 
would be on the excess profits large integrated oil companies have 
earned as fuel prices reached record heights over the past year.
  My amendment draws from Senator Schumer's legislation to define 
windfall profits. My amendment creates a temporary levy on the excess 
profits of U.S. oil companies and foreign companies that do substantial 
business in the United States. I would like to thank Senators Dorgan 
and Dodd for proposing the windfall profits tax, and Senator Schumer 
for his modification to this proposal.
  The temporary levy applies to major integrated oil companies which 
have an average daily world-wide production of crude oil of at least 
500,000 barrels for the taxable year. Under our revenue mechanism 
companies will calculate the average of annual profits for the years 
2002 to 2004, subtracting the highest year, and then adding 10 percent. 
The resulting number is the reasonably inflated average profit for 
calculating the amount of windfall profits. Any profits earned from 
U.S. operations in 2005 that exceed this reasonably inflated average 
profit are deemed a ``windfall profit'' and is taxed at the rate 
necessary to raise the required $2.92 billion needed to fully fund 
LIHEAP.
  This is a temporary 1-year measure. The tax rate is set simply to 
fund the authorized level of LIHEAP. In America no family should be 
forced to choose between heating their home and putting food on the 
table for their children. No senior citizen should have to decide 
between buying fuel or buying pharmaceuticals. But, unfortunately, this 
sadly is the case and this winter it will be the case in too many 
situations. The heat-or-eat dilemma is not just rhetoric. The RAND 
Corporation conducted a study and found that low-income households 
reduced food expenditures by roughly the same amount as increases in 
fuel expenditures. In some respects this is a tidal wave not of rising 
water like Katrina but of rising energy prices.
  We have all gone out and had the opportunity to visit with 
constituents and get a firsthand glimpse of the struggle they are faced 
with. I visited a few weeks ago with Mr. Aram Ohanian, an 88-year-old 
veteran of the U.S. Army in World War II, living on a $779-a-month 
Social Security check, and money is so tight that sometimes he has to 
eat with his children or go to a local soup kitchen, and he also has to 
get assistance from a food bank. These price increases to Mr. Ohanian 
will be very difficult. He received assistance last year with respect 
to LIHEAP funding, but that assistance will be relatively less this 
year because of rising prices and maybe because the demand will be much 
more.
  Last month, the Social Security Administration announced that cost-
of-living adjustments for 2006 on average is about $65. That $65 
increase to Mr. Ohanian is not going to take up the slack in terms of 
these tremendous fuel prices.
  Now, this amendment would increase LIHEAP funding by $2.92 billion. 
In fact, even if we did this, there would still be a significant number 
of Americans who qualify for the program but will not get help. But at 
least we are taking a step toward fully authorizing this very important 
program.
  I hope we can, in fact, support this effort. Some have objected not 
because the LIHEAP program does need money but because there was no 
offset. Today there is an offset. This windfall profits tax will pay 
for the additional cost of LIHEAP, and I can't think of anything more 
appropriate than asking fuel companies, oil companies to take some of 
their very extraordinary profits and put them back so that poor people 
can buy their products. I think that is fair. I think it is just. I 
think it makes a lot of sense.
  I asked them voluntarily, sent a letter to all the oil executives 
saying: Would you pledge 10 percent of your profits to the local 
community agencies that provide support? I have heard but from one 
company, CITGO, who talked about their plan to give bulk fuel. Everyone 
else has said nothing. They are going on as if American families are 
not in desperate situations because of the price of heating oil.
  Mr. President, I hope my colleagues, in fact, are able to support 
this method which fully pays for the increase to LIHEAP which so many 
of us agree is absolutely necessary.
  I yield back the Senator from Montana any time I have.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, if my colleague will yield a second, I ask 
unanimous consent that after the Coburn amendment is debated or set 
aside, Senator Santorum be recognized to speak for 15 minutes, Mr. Byrd 
be recognized to speak for 30 minutes, and Senator Feingold be 
recognized to offer his amendment on pay-go with 30 minutes of debate 
equally divided.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. DODD. Mr. President, may I ask--the understanding at this moment 
is Senator Dorgan and myself are recognized for how much time?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Fifteen minutes on each side--15 minutes for 
the Senators from Connecticut and North Dakota and 15 minutes on the 
other side.
  Mr. DODD. Mr. President, let me thank, again, my colleague from North 
Dakota for offering this amendment. I am pleased to be the lead 
cosponsor of it.
  This was brought up a number of weeks ago. This isn't something the 
Senator from North Dakota conjured up in the last several days. It is 
one he suggested back a number of weeks ago when the first skyrocketing 
prices occurred and the information emerged about these incredible, 
historic profits.
  Just to put it in perspective in these few minutes, we have remaining 
before we vote on this amendment, in the space of 12 weeks--12 weeks--
the five largest integrated oil companies secured profits approaching 
$33 billion.
  Now, again, let me state the obvious, or hopefully what is the 
obvious. The Senator from North Dakota and I have no difficulty 
whatsoever with the idea that businesses, including energy companies, 
make a legitimate and decent profit because of their investments and 
their work. But from time to time we have seen in our Nation's history 
profiteering where excessive profits are made at the expense of what 
needs to be done for the good of the country. In this case, to develop 
additional energy resources.
  What we are suggesting with this amendment is that with windfall 
profits that exceed $40 a barrel, we offer the integrated companies an 
alternative. One: take the windfall profits and invest them back in the 
development of existing or alternative energy sources; or two: give 
rebates to consumers in this country who are paying these incredibly 
higher prices in gasoline and home heating oil. Don't just go out and 
buy your own stock or engage in merger acquisitions at a time when we 
need to be less dependent on politically fragile parts of the world 
such as we are today.
  We know over and over again, that the companies are bragging in their 
own annual reports about record profits. In 2004, one major oil 
company, in

[[Page 27012]]

 its annual report, stated that it had recorded 48 percent higher 
profits because of the higher prices of oil and gasoline. And at the 
same time they announced to the world in that annual report that they 
actually reduced their production by 3 percent. We know that refining 
capacity is near 100 percent. We also know that many of these same 
integrated companies virtually eliminated 176 refineries in the last 25 
years. It is not because of environmental problems or people objecting 
to existing refineries. They decided themselves to reduce their 
refining capacity.
  Again, you don't need to have a Ph.D. in economics to understand a 
company is profiteering to such a degree that it hurts our country. We 
ought to be doing a better job than that.
  With this amendment, we are asking this industry to either reinvest 
these excessive profits into increasing the availability of supply in 
our country or provide the rebates for individuals who could use the 
help. It is not just taking the money and putting it in the general 
fund and saying, We will decide what to do with it later.
  I heard my colleague from Rhode Island making an impassioned plea for 
the LIHEAP program, and I agree with him. I have watched him offer this 
amendment on several occasions over the last few years. This body has 
seen fit to turn down those amendments over and over. So we are not 
going to get much help there.
  The suggestion is, why not ask this industry that is recording nearly 
$33 billion of profits in 12 weeks to do a little something to help the 
folks in Connecticut, Minnesota, or North Dakota who are going to be 
paying very high home heating prices. In fact, in my State, the 
estimated cost in that area alone would be about $325 more this year 
per household, not to mention, the continued high gasoline prices. 
While gasoline prices are coming down somewhat, they are still about 32 
cents higher than last year.
  Again, I think the industry owes it. We saw during another time in 
our Nation's history, World War II, that another Senator in this body, 
Harry Truman, demanded a stop to the profiteering that was occurring in 
this country.
  We are not denying anybody a right to make a legitimate profit, but 
when those profits put our Nation at risk, when they cause people who 
deserve better to pay exorbitant prices to stay warm and to use the 
automobiles they need, then we ought to be standing up as a collective 
body saying: You have to stop that. There is no justification for it. 
Remember, these prices began to climb before August 29. It wasn't 
Katrina. These prices began to climb during the spring and summer 
months. Katrina has caused some problems, no question about it, but to 
use Katrina as the excuse for these skyrocketing prices is not based on 
fact at all. We are urging our colleagues to join us in this effort. 
This would be a major source of relief for people across the country. 
Alternatively, the industry could do the right thing and invest those 
windfall profits in new energy sources and refineries instead of 
merging and buying back their own stock. Half of the profits last year 
were spent on buying back stock, not in new exploration. The amendment 
serves as an incentive. That is what the Dorgan amendment does.
  I am pleased to be a cosponsor of the amendment. We urge our 
colleagues to support it.
  I yield to my colleague.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, how much time remains?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Nine minutes.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, first, I thank my colleague from 
Connecticut for his support on this amendment.
  I want to spend a little time responding to some of the opponents who 
have completely mischaracterized the amendment, which is everyone's 
right on the floor of the Senate. It is important for everyone to hear 
the facts.
  We did hear last evening a colleague say he was sick of populism, 
just sick of populism. When the little guy gets hurt, and the little 
guy is getting rich at the same time, populism means you stand up for 
the little guy. And I would say, get used to it. If you are sick of it, 
get used to it, because this Senate floor is where you stand for people 
who don't have the capability to stand for themselves.
  In this case, what is happening in our country is unfair, just 
unfair. The oil giants, larger because of mergers, are recording record 
profits, the highest in the history. Here are what the profits look 
like, unbelievable profits, the highest in the history of corporate 
America, and the consumers experience all the pain. They wonder, as 
they see the headlines, ``Big Oil's Burden of Too Much Cash,'' ``High 
Energy Prices Lift Profits at ConocoPhillips by 89 Percent.'' I could 
go on and on. ExxonMobil, $9.9 billion in the third quarter. I could go 
on.
  The consumers wonder, as they fill their tanks, about these 
headlines. They wonder about these headlines as they try to heat their 
home this winter and pay 40, 50, 60 percent more to do it. They wonder 
out on the farm someplace about these headlines when they try to figure 
out, How am I going to be able to buy a tank of fuel?
  This proposal is very simple. This proposal says that for oil over 
$40 a barrel price, we would impose a windfall profits tax, except that 
no company would pay it if all their profits are being invested into 
the ground to search for more energy or above ground to build more 
refineries. If that is what they are doing with profits, this doesn't 
affect them. They don't have to worry.
  We have had all kinds of folks coming out to the floor with talking 
points. If I was the oil industry, I wouldn't like what we are doing 
either. I understand that. It is perfectly logic. The talking points 
say if this amendment is passed, we are going to see less production of 
oil and gas. That is total rubbish, complete nonsense. In fact, the 
most significant incentive for the increased production of oil and gas 
in this country would be the prospect of having to pay a 50-percent 
excise tax on profits if you don't use them for that purpose.
  We say: If you do use them to expand supply of energy and therefore 
reduce price, you are exempt. Don't worry about this. Let me show what 
BusinessWeek says:

       Why Isn't Big Oil Drilling More? Rather than developing new 
     fields, oil giants have preferred to buy rivals--drilling for 
     oil on Wall Street.

  If you are buying back stock, drilling for oil on Wall Street, or if 
you are not using the money to expand the supply of energy, then you 
risk being hit with a windfall profits tax, the entire purpose of which 
would be to provide rebates to consumers, not to bring money into the 
Federal Treasury, but instead to provide a recapture and provide 
rebates to consumers. It is painfully simple.
  Again, I say, as my colleague from Connecticut has, I think profits 
are fine. It is what makes our businesses work. But these are profits 
the likes of which we have never seen. Last year, the average price of 
oil was $40 a barrel, and the industry had the highest profits in 
history. This is unfair in this country, and we need to do something 
about it.
  I have quoted before Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys, but what he 
said in that song in the thirties certainly does apply to this:

       The little bee sucks the blossom, but the big bee gets the 
     honey.
       The little guy picks the cotton and the big guy gets the 
     money.

  And so it goes. At this point, using energy is not a luxury. Using 
energy for every American is a necessity. The question is, should the 
oil giants, made larger by blockbuster mergers, be showing record 
profits and then using the money to drill for oil on Wall Street, hoard 
cash or buy back their stock at the same time average Americans are 
trying to figure out how on Earth do I pay this fuel bill? Our 
amendment tries to solve that.
  How much time remains?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 4 minutes 20 seconds.
  Mr. DORGAN. I reserve my time. If there are speakers on the other 
side, I prefer they use their time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? The Senator from Wyoming.

[[Page 27013]]


  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, we are back on the amendment again. This 
morning we went through this, but I think it is worthwhile going 
through it again to talk about the difficulty of trying to do something 
with a windfall profits tax.
  We have done this before, and I know my colleagues put some 
exemptions in there. The fact is, they are still taking windfall 
profits, something we tried before and doesn't work. Distribution 
doesn't work. We have been through that. This is something that is not 
consistent with the marketplace functioning. I don't know how many 
times we have to go through this, but I suppose it is an issue that is 
certainly worth talking about.
  I think, as I said this morning, there are several issues involved in 
this bill. One of them is the economy, and the economy is to develop 
jobs, to have organizations that make profits that create jobs and 
build the economy, and we need to do that.
  The second issue, of course, and the most important perhaps for many 
of us, is energy--to have energy. We can see the energy bills are going 
down. We are moving beyond that crisis, down to where it was before. 
But the long-term issue still remains, and that is the one that is 
important to talk about. That is why we spent 2 or 3 years with an 
energy policy, a policy that recognizes that what we have been doing in 
the past, the kinds of sources we have had in the past are not going to 
always be there. We have to have an opportunity to move forward.
  This idea of saying, We will not charge you if you go ahead and 
invest--there is going to be investment. There has always been 
investment. I come from a State where energy is being put out there. A 
lot of you don't. You don't understand what it costs to do some of 
these things. It is going to cost even more as we go to deeper wells, 
as we go to oil shale, as we go to secondary recovery. But the idea 
that is being used by my friend over here is that the energy companies 
are making too much money.
  Take a look at this chart. This chart shows earnings of major 
industries during the second quarter of 2005. And then it is adjusted 
to the third quarter of 2005, where we are now. Take a little look 
here. What is the highest one? Banks. Maybe we ought to have a little 
windfall profits tax on banks, do you think, and put that money out? 
Why don't you try that one. Here is pharmaceuticals. My gosh, 18-
percent return. That would be great. Then you can hand out a bunch of 
free drugs. I think that would work into your philosophy. Software 
services, semiconductors, diversified financials, household personal 
products, consumer services, insurance, communications, food and 
beverage, real estate, health care, materials, U.S. industry average, 
7.9. Oh, my goodness, here is oil and natural gas, 7.6, below the 
national average. And this whole thing is predicated on these people 
making too much money. I don't understand that. That has been adjusted. 
Now they are right above that, 8. Look where they are. What is unusual 
about that?
  These are big dollars, that is true, but the return on investment is 
not extraordinary. There has been more activity there, so obviously 
there are more dollars.
  I wish my colleagues would come with me and talk about what we 
anticipate happening, what we are going to do about changing some of 
the energy that is going into other kinds of products so that we can 
have it for the future. Do you think that is going to cost a lot of 
money? Of course it is. Do you think they want to have to justify what 
their investment is with the Federal Government? I don't think so.
  If there is anything around here we need to be doing, it is getting 
the Federal Government out of some of these kinds of private sector 
investments instead of getting into it more and more.
  What the Senator is suggesting is, if I am an energy company, I have 
to go to an agency and find out whether what I am doing justifies me 
not having a withholding tax. Those are not the kinds of things we need 
to do.
  We continue to hear more and more about let's get the Federal 
Government involved in making these kinds of decisions. These aren't 
the kind of decisions that need to be made. That is the marketplace, 
and that is what the marketplace is about. We can see it changing 
almost daily, and it should, there is no question about that.
  Again, this whole discussion that has gone on today and yesterday 
makes me wonder why we messed around trying to get an energy policy 
that gives us some direction in the future, that gives us some idea of 
how we should be investing in the future, with new kinds of energy and 
doing it without getting the approval of a Federal Government agency or 
somebody in the Congress to decide whether that investment is a sound 
investment. That is what the marketplace is for. We are making real 
progress in doing that.
  I think this idea--and I know the idea is basically how we are going 
to get some money out to everyone, which is not a brand-new idea. My 
friends on the other side are big on that one, and I understand it, but 
this is not the way to do that. This is not the way to take windfall 
profits, and if so, let's start up here at the top of the chart. Let's 
start up here. If we are going to play that game, why, that is probably 
the way we ought to go.
  I will stop here and reserve the remainder of my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? The Senator from North 
Dakota.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, I yield myself 2 minutes. That was about 
as good a presentation supporting windfall profits as could be made. 
These charts of an 89-percent increase, the highest profits in the 
history of corporations, and so on, it is a pretty hard case to make on 
the floor of the Senate that these profits don't exist or this industry 
somehow isn't very profitable.
  My colleague talks about the long run. The problem is you don't heat 
your home in the long run, you heat your home tonight. And if you are 
stuck with a 50-percent increase to heat your home tonight, you don't 
worry about the long run; you have to figure out how you do it now.
  My constituents and his, when they order a load of fuel to be 
delivered to their farm and ranch, they are not going to pay for that 
in the long run; they are going to pay for it now.
  My point is this: This notion of the marketplace functioning--I would 
love to have a debate about the marketplace. This is so far from the 
free marketplace, it is unbelievable. There is no free market here. You 
have OPEC ministers sitting around a table deciding supply and price. 
There are the biggest oil companies, much bigger because of mergers, 
that have more raw muscle in the marketplace, and then there are the 
futures markets which, instead of providing liquidity, have become 
grand casinos of speculation. Now we call it the marketplace. Too bad 
for the consumers.
  Somebody ought to probably stand on the side of the consumers--that 
is the point of all of this--to say that this is not fair. This 
marketplace does not work for everybody. It works to provide the 
biggest profits in history for the oil companies.
  My colleague says: Well, they are just doing a really good job. Yes, 
they are. BusinessWeek itself says what they are doing is drilling for 
oil on Wall Street, not drilling for oil underground.
  Our point is simple: No major oil companies will pay this windfall 
profits tax if they are doing the right thing. And if they are not, we 
will recapture it and send rebates to consumers. If my colleagues are 
against that, vote against the amendment, and I understand it.
  I reserve our time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I will just pick up and then let my friend 
from Wyoming conclude this debate. Again, I commend him on trying to 
make as strong a case as he could.
  There is a fundamental difference here. We are talking about not just 
any other commodity or service; we are talking about things that are 
essential for people to survive. We are about to enter the winter 
season. We have been

[[Page 27014]]

feeling it in the Nation's Capitol the last 24 hours; the temperature 
has dropped to 40 degrees. I suspect our Indian summer is over. Across 
the northern tier States and western States alike, people on fixed 
incomes do not have any choice on whether to heat their homes and take 
care of their families. So unlike other sectors of the economy where 
there are some choices involved, when it comes to this commodity, oil, 
America depends upon it for people to remain safe, healthy, and sound.
  Many people across the country, certainly in western States more than 
eastern states, have no other alternative in terms of how they get to 
their jobs or their schools or those places they must be. It is the 
automobile. That is what they have to rely on. Mass transit systems do 
not exist everywhere. So this is not just some random commodity or 
service we are talking about. That is the first point.
  No. 2, the point was made earlier by my colleague from North Dakota, 
that we are talking about the large, integrated oil companies. I showed 
the list yesterday. We now talk about ExxonMobil; it used to be Exxon 
and Mobil. It used to be Conoco and Phillips; now it is ConocoPhillips. 
At some point we may have one or two companies left. When OPEC sits 
down, that is hardly free enterprise or a free market system. These 
prices are being established by a handful of people basically deciding 
what we will pay as consumers.
  One tries to find some economic justification for it and some people 
are saying it was Katrina. Again, I admit Katrina has caused 
disruption, but these prices moved long before Katrina occurred. There 
is no economic justification that I can find. In fact, the industry 
itself admits that they showed record profits while they reduced 
production.
  Their own annual reports indicate what they are doing with the 
profits. They are out there buying back their own stock. They are 
engaging in mergers.
  We are saying, Look, you owe some responsibility to increase 
production or help us develop some alternatives. We just gave you 
massive tax breaks in the Energy bill. Alternatively, provide some 
relief to the businesses, the farmers, the consumers who are going to 
be paying these higher prices. This provides an alternative, an 
incentive. We provided an incentive with the Energy bill by providing 
tax breaks for the industry. They get the tax break if they will do 
certain things.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  Mr. DODD. We urge the adoption of this amendment. These are essential 
needs. There is no choice for consumers today. This is a proper role 
for Government, to go in and demand this kind of accountability.
  We yield back the remainder of the time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. THOMAS. Do I have some time remaining?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 8 minutes 46 seconds 
remaining.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, it is interesting, the proper role for 
Government--I guess that is a choice we make. Certainly we have a 
different point of view about the role of Government, not only on this 
but on many things.
  We talk about how important oil and gas is. It certainly is 
important. What about food and beverage--is this important? No, that is 
just something that we play with. What about insurance--is that 
important? Of course, all of these things are important. Somehow we 
want to pick out one commodity and do something with it. We keep 
talking about these profits. Again, let me say that the profits in 
these companies are not as equal as these. So the idea that they are 
overly profitable--they are not.
  I am not sure that the Senator is familiar with the costs of energy 
production. We are talking now about doing offshore things. It costs 
millions of dollars to drill a well. These are not small-dollar kinds 
of things.
  Again, I say one should not have to subject themselves to the 
oversight of a Government agency to decide whether they can use the 
money they earn to invest in their own business. That just does not 
make much sense.
  We talk about reducing the costs. Well, everybody wants to reduce the 
costs. Take a look at the gas pump over the last 6 months. It has been 
reduced from about $3 a gallon to now below $2, so we are making some 
progress.
  He talks about OPEC setting the price. Why do my colleagues think 
that is? Because we are so dependent on importing energy. Our job ought 
to be to allow ourselves to have these investments in domestic energy, 
alternative energy, and do some things to avoid what has been done 
there.
  So I understand my friends over there who have a different point of 
view, but it is quite a different point of view. It is quite a 
different point of view than we have had in this bill. It is quite a 
different point of view than we have had in the Energy bill. It is 
quite a different point of view in the ideas we have had to create a 
stronger economy and more jobs. So I certainly urge people to vote 
against this amendment.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. BROWNBACK. Mr. President, I rise today in opposition to Senator 
Dorgan's windfall profits tax amendment. This amendment seeks to punish 
oil companies with a punitive tax on profits when oil prices go above 
$40 per barrel. This amendment is shortsighted and extremely bad fiscal 
policy.
  First, this bill already includes a $4.923 billion tax penalty on 
large integrated oil companies. The Dorgan amendment would simply add 
on to the penalty currently in this bill. The belief persists that the 
oil companies' profits are ``extreme'' or ``excessive.'' However, this 
belief is unfounded. Yes, most oil companies did have record-setting 
profits during the 3rd quarter. But history has clearly shown that the 
oil industry is ``boom or bust.'' One needs look no further than my 
home State of Kansas. During the 1970s and 1980s, the economy in Kansas 
was tied directly to the oil and natural gas industry. As their profits 
spiked or fell, our economy would do the same. I say this to prove that 
I have firsthand knowledge of how volatile the oil industry is. We need 
not tax a single industry simply because it had a good quarter. Even a 
record-setting quarter is not reason to add a windfall tax. This is bad 
policy and sets a negative precedent. This clearly puts a disincentive 
in the marketplace for American companies, in all sectors of our 
economy, to not perform their best. This is not the signal we want to 
be sending in a competitive, global economy.
  Building upon the fact that the oil industry has many fluctuations, a 
windfall tax on profits would reduce needed private investments in 
energy infrastructure. If the industry is not allowed to benefit during 
periods of high prices because of a tax on profits, there will be 
precious little incentive to invest in domestic production. These 
investments lead to more production, which in turn lead to lower 
prices. A windfall profit tax would disrupt the normal cyclical 
movement of the energy industry.
  Finally, a windfall profits tax would harm the numerous individuals 
who have invested in the energy industry through pension plans and 
mutual funds because this new tax would reduce capital gains and 
dividends payments.
  Mr. President, I believe it is clear this amendment would do much 
more harm than good. It is shortsighted, market distorting, and sets a 
bad precedent for every industry in our economy.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  The Senator from Connecticut is out of time.
  Mr. DODD. I yield back our time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time is yielded back.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order that the Dorgan 
amendment is not germane to the underlying legislation.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional

[[Page 27015]]

Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable sections of that act 
for purposes of the pending amendment, and I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant Journal clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 35, nays 64, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 331 Leg.]

                                YEAS--35

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--64

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lincoln
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Pryor
     Roberts
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Corzine
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cornyn). On this vote, the yeas are 35, 
the nays are 64.
  Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.


                           Amendment No. 2609

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There are now 2 minutes equally divided in 
relation to the Feinstein amendment No. 2609.
  The Senator from California is recognized.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I present this amendment on behalf of 
Senators Sununu, Gregg, Wyden, Cantwell, Feingold, Burr, McCain, Kerry, 
Collins, Clinton, Schumer, Snowe, and myself.
  In April of this year, the President of the United States stated 
this:

       With oil at more than $50 a barrel, energy companies do not 
     need taxpayer-funded incentives to explore for oil and gas.

  Before a joint Senate hearing last week, the big companies--
ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BP, and Shell--said they do not 
need these tax incentives. Each CEO said they did not need it.
  This amendment removes those tax incentives. I think the time has 
come to do that.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I offer my strong support for Senator 
Feinstein's amendment to change section 263(C) of the Tax Code, and I 
thank her for her work on it. The provision that her amendment targets 
allows large, integrated oil companies to expense, instead of 
capitalize, intangible drilling and development costs, such as fuel 
costs, workers' wages, and drilling equipment. This is a complicated 
way of saying that U.S. taxpayer dollars have been subsidizing the 
regular costs of integrated oil companies doing business, something 
that doesn't make sense.
  Repealing this provision of the Tax Code could result in upwards of 
$2 billion more dollars in the Treasury over the next 5 years. Two 
billion dollars instead of simply transferring this significant amount 
of money to companies we all know are currently experiencing record 
profits, these funds could support a variety of important programs or 
could be used to reduce our skyrocketing deficit so that our children 
don't inherit our fiscal mess. Integrated oil companies are some of the 
largest corporations in the world--they simply don't need this tax 
break.
  This amendment makes common sense and I encourage my colleagues to 
vote in favor of it.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield 1 minute to the Senator from New 
Mexico.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico is recognized.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, first, the Senator is offering an 
amendment which purports to respond to what some executives had to say 
about whether they needed or wanted the tax provisions in the Tax 
Policy Act we passed. These provisions--the principal ones--are 50 
years old. They are not part of the energy package. They have been 
there for 50 years, upon which the energy companies rely when they 
drill expensive holes and invest expensive amounts. It has to do with 
the amortization of costs. Some of it is intangible, meaning it is not 
a product because part of the cost is intangible. Part of the cost that 
goes into producing these is seismic information and the like. That is 
why it is called that. But these were not adopted in the energy 
package. They have been part of the production of energy in the United 
States for eons. We want more production, and we come along and take 
those away.
  It seems to me this is the wrong time, and it is not germane.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa is recognized.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order that the 
Feinstein amendment is not germane to the underlying bill.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections of that act for the purposes of the pending amendment, and I 
ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Vitter). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 48, nays 51, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 332 Leg.]

                                YEAS--48

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Boxer
     Burr
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Coleman
     Collins
     Dayton
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dodd
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Gregg
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     McCain
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Sununu
     Talent
     Wyden

                                NAYS--51

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Conrad
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     Dole
     Domenici
     Dorgan
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Levin
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Stevens
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Corzine
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this question, the yeas are 48, the nays 
are 51. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having 
voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.


                           Amendment No. 2610

  There are now 2 minutes equally divided prior to a vote on the 
Feinstein amendment No. 2610.

[[Page 27016]]


  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, we have all seen the HHS bill go down 
in the Senate. There is a message in this. That is that the people of 
America are only going to accept so many cuts in health care, in 
Medicaid, in Medicare, in transportation, and other vital areas.
  This amendment directly targets our budget deficit. If the budget is 
not in balance, tax rates for income, capital gains, and dividends will 
return to previous levels and deductions for taxpayers earning more 
than an adjusted gross income of $1 million a year.
  According to the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Tax Policy 
Center, this amendment could increase revenues by more than $100 
billion over 5 years. It is a strong step, a first step in helping the 
budget deficit and also saying to people in this country that 
millionaires are prepared to forego tax cuts to benefit the very poor 
of our country.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa is recognized.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I am against the Feinstein amendment. It is a typical 
Democratic response to a budget: Raise taxes. They happen to think that 
Americans are crying, ``We are undertaxed.'' I don't hear that from my 
constituents. I bet they don't hear it in California either.
  If those taxpayers she is talking about were only coupon-clipping, 
Park Avenue millionaires or somebody from Rodeo Drive, a resident of 
Beverly Hills, I would not be concerned. But we are talking about 
taxing small business people 80 percent by the Treasury Department. The 
people that fall into this category whom she wants to tax are the small 
business people that create 70 to 80 percent of the jobs in America. 
There is no reason, when we finally have the individual tax rate at 35, 
the same as the corporate tax rate, to treat small business the same as 
we treat corporations--not have a bias in the tax bill. We shouldn't go 
back to that bias.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time has expired.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is recognized to state his point 
of order.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order that the 
Feinstein amendment is not germane to the underlying bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California is recognized.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections for the purposes of the pending amendment, and I ask for the 
yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announced that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. 
Corzine) is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 40, nays 59, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 333 Leg.]

                                YEAS--40

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--59

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Cantwell
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Corzine
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 40, the nays are 
59. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.


                           Amendment No. 2612

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There are now 2 minutes evenly divided prior 
to a vote in relation to the Cantwell amendment No. 2612.
  Who seeks recognition?
  The Senator from Washington.
  Ms. CANTWELL. My amendment makes price gouging a Federal crime. It 
does two things. It implements what is in 28 different States the law 
to make sure consumers are protected from price gouging, and it gives 
the FTC, the Department of Justice, and State attorneys general the 
ability to look at market manipulation as a Federal crime when energy 
markets are manipulated. I urge my colleagues to support, at a time 
when we are going home to high heating oil prices, something that will 
protect consumers by giving new tools to the Federal statute.
  Mr. KOHL. Mr. President, I rise today in support of the Cantwell 
anti-price gouging amendment to S. 2020, the tax reconciliation bill. 
This amendment is identical to Senator Cantwell's Energy Emergency 
Consumer Protection Act of 2005, a bill that I co-sponsored with 29 
colleagues. This amendment will, for the first time, give our Federal 
Government the needed tools to prosecute those unscrupulous individuals 
and companies that seek to take advantage of emergencies and disasters 
by price gouging consumers in the sale of gasoline and other petroleum 
products.
  We have all seen the suffering caused to consumers when gas prices 
spike in the wake of disruptions in supply caused by natural disasters. 
While gas prices have come down from their record levels of over $ 3.00 
per gallon in many places in the last few weeks, they are still too 
high. And the experience of this past September teaches us that the 
danger to consumers resulting from tight supplies and high demand 
remains acute. We cannot allow consumers to remain vulnerable to price 
gouging and market manipulation the next time our essential energy 
supplies face disruption.
  Recent experience shows us beyond doubt the need for this amendment. 
Allegations of price gouging and drastic price spikes were 
unfortunately commonplace in the immediate days following the Hurricane 
Katrina disaster--including, for example, gas being sold at $6.00 per 
gallon in the Atlanta area. It appeared that the human suffering caused 
by loss of life, housing, and employment, was compounded by some 
unscrupulous individuals and businesses who took advantage of the 
emergency by gouging consumers. Yet, under current law, the Federal 
Government had virtually no ability to prosecute such price gouging. 
This amendment will correct this critical deficiency.
  This amendment contains several important provisions. First, it gives 
the President the authority to declare an energy emergency during times 
of disruptions in the supply or distribution of gasoline or petroleum 
products. Second, the amendment, for the first time, declares illegal 
under Federal law selling gasoline or petroleum products at a price 
unconscionably high or when circumstances indicate that the seller is 
taking unfair advantage to increase prices unreasonably in times of 
energy emergency. Those who violate this law face civil penalties of up 
to $3,000,000 per day and criminal penalties, including jail terms of 
up to 5 years for individuals, as well. The amendment also forbids 
market manipulation in connection with the sale of gasoline and 
petroleum products and empowers the experts at the Federal Trade 
Commission to write regulations setting forth specific conduct 
constitution market

[[Page 27017]]

manipulation. Additionally, our amendment gives States attorneys 
general the power to enforce these provisions as well.
  These measures are an urgently needed deterrent to prevent all those 
would seek to profit from disasters such as Hurricane Katrina by price 
gouging consumers in the price of gasoline or other essential energy 
supplies. Our amendment will protect consumers--both those who were the 
victims of Hurricane Katrina and those who may be victimized in the 
future--who suffer every day at the gas pumps from the real and growing 
economic pain caused by high gas and energy prices. As ranking member 
on the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, I believe that this measure is 
necessary to prevent unscrupulous companies from ever again using a 
natural or manmade disaster to justify uncompetitive gas price hikes. 
All of us can agree that profiteering and price gouging in the price of 
an essential commodity like gasoline is simply unacceptable. Such 
conduct violates every principle of free and fair competition. We must 
give the Federal Government the necessary tools to prevent such 
misconduct, and prosecute those who do so.
  I urge my colleagues to support the Cantwell amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
  Mr. STEVENS. Mr. President, the committee held a hearing on this and 
some of the items we are pursuing, some of the concepts, might be 
involved with this amendment. But this is not germane to this bill, nor 
the place for the Senate to consider this action. The FTC may need some 
jurisdiction here, but the jurisdiction that would follow with the 
Cantwell amendment is much too broad. Twenty-seven States have this 
authority now. The question is whether we should at some time give the 
FTC jurisdiction over multiple State problems. This is no way to go 
about it. It is not germane to the bill. I raise a point of order that 
the amendment is not germane to the underlying bill.
  Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections of the act for consideration of the pending amendment, and I 
ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion. The clerk will call the 
roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Chafee). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 57, nays 42, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 334 Leg.]

                                YEAS--57

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Coleman
     Collins
     Conrad
     Cornyn
     Dayton
     DeWine
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Graham
     Harkin
     Hutchison
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Talent
     Thune
     Wyden

                                NAYS--42

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Thomas
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Corzine
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote the yeas are 57, the nays are 42. 
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted in 
the affirmative, the motion is not agreed to. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I propose that we reach a time agreement 
on this next pending amendment, which is the Coburn amendment. I ask 
unanimous consent that the time on the Coburn amendment be limited to 1 
hour equally divided.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Oklahoma.
  Mr. COBURN. Reserving the right to object, Mr. President, I probably 
don't have a problem with that. I do not want to make a time 
agreement----
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, the Senate is not in order. I have a hard 
time hearing the Senator.
  Mr. COBURN. It is my hope that we could finish this in 1 hour, and I 
will do everything I can to do that. I do not want to limit my ability 
to answer questions in this case. The Senator has my word that I will 
limit the amount of debate so that we can try to finish in an hour. But 
I would object to limiting it formally, and I will do everything I can 
to finish it in an hour.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I hear the Senator from Oklahoma, with all due respect. I 
wonder if we could agree to maybe 1\1/2\ hours.
  Mr. COBURN. I have no objection to that whatsoever.
  Mr. BAUCUS. With the understanding that perhaps an hour and a half 
may not all be used.
  Mr. COBURN. I have no objection.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I renew my request for 1\1/2\ hours equally divided.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is 
so ordered.
  The Senator from Mississippi.


                           Amendment No. 2633

  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2633 and ask for its 
immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Mississippi [Mr. Lott] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2633.

  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of the 
amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To clarify treatment of outside income and expenses in the 
                                Senate)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

     SEC. __. CLARIFICATION OF TREATMENT OF OUTSIDE INCOME AND 
                   EXPENSES IN THE SENATE.

       (a) In General.--For purposes of rule XXXVI and paragraph 
     5(b)(3) of rule XXXVII of the Standing Rules of the Senate, 
     compensation or outside earned income for any calendar year 
     shall be reduced by actual and necessary expenses incurred by 
     a Member of the Senate in connection with the practice of 
     medicine. A Member of the Senate shall include information 
     with respect to such expenses with any report in which such 
     compensation or income is required to be included.
       (b) Payment or Reimbursement.--If expenses described in 
     subsection (a) are--
       (1) paid or reimbursed by another person, the amount of any 
     such payment shall not be counted as compensation or outside 
     earned income; and
       (2) not paid or reimbursed, the amount of compensation or 
     outside earned income shall be determined by subtracting the 
     actual and necessary expenses incurred by the Member from any 
     payment received for the activity.

  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, this is the amendment dealing with the 
resolution of the Senator from Oklahoma, and I just want to clarify 
that because it will be referred to as the Coburn amendment. I want to 
make sure everybody understands that is what we are talking about.
  Before I get into my remarks, I would like to yield, as a convenience 
to him, the first 2 minutes to Senator Hatch, or for additional time if 
he needs it.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I thank my colleague.
  Mr. President, I rise in support of the amendment offered by our 
colleagues

[[Page 27018]]

from Mississippi and Oklahoma, the Coburn amendment.
  First of all, let me say I am sorry this amendment is even necessary.
  It is obvious to everybody that Dr. Coburn, Senator Coburn, is an 
intelligent and dedicated medical doctor whose respect and love for 
helping people is legendary.
  It is equally obvious that Dr. Coburn is an accomplished legislator 
whose contributions to the work of this body are important. No one can 
raise an issue about Dr. Coburn's work ethic, his loyalty to the 
Senate, to Oklahoma, or his constituents, and I say this as someone who 
has agreed with him on many occasions and as someone who has clashed 
swords with him on occasions.
  There is no question in my mind the Government in general and the 
Senate in particular benefit from informed legislators. To preclude, 
Dr. Coburn--a recognized medical expert--from practicing medicine 
without any profit motive whatsoever is nonsensical.
  There are a lot of people who depend on him and need his services; at 
the same time, he needs to keep up his clinical skills so that he can 
continue to practice medicine whenever he decides to leave the Senate. 
And he will not be able to maintain his surgical skills or his hospital 
privileges if he doesn't have this privilege.
  In fact, it is a simple precept of government life that policymakers 
should develop some expertise in the issues they are deliberating.
  To compare him to attorneys--who very often have a profit motive--is 
the wrong comparison, I think.
  We all know Dr. Coburn to be a fine man who has a great deal of 
affection for his patients. I believe he deserves the opportunity to 
continue to help his patients, continue his medical privileges, and be 
able to pay for any liability insurance that he may need. He will not 
make a penny from his efforts, but he will be able to up his skills, 
which I think is a benefit on all levels.
  What better way for a doctor to develop that expertise than to 
continue the practice of medicine, helping real, live people with real, 
live problems in the real-world hospital or clinic setting?
  I happen to know a little about this, even though I am a lawyer by 
training.
  As my colleagues are aware, I have taken a great interest in health 
issues since coming to the Congress.
  It has been my practice to solicit actively medical professionals to 
help advise me on health legislative matters.
  I have been fortunate, for many years, to have been aided in my 
working representing Utahns, by the assistance of very capable Robert 
Wood Johnson Foundation health policy fellows.
  These fellows, doctors, nurses, dentists, and health professionals, 
work each year in congressional offices on both sides of the aisle, and 
I think all of my colleagues who are fortunate enough to work with RWJ 
Fellows feel their work as been enriched by the presence of these very 
capable men and women.
  I think back on those who have worked in my office, and I am so proud 
of what we accomplished together--David Sundwall, M.D., now the head of 
the Utah Health Department, Phil Marion, M.D., Michael Ashburn, M.D., 
Larry Kerr, PhD, Marlon Priest, M.D., David Russell, DDS, Mark Carlson, 
M.D., Kira Bacal, M.D.--they are all superstars.
  Several years ago, before my current health policy director, Pattie 
DeLoatche, joined my staff, I talked to a previous fellow, Dr. Priest, 
about joining us in the Senate.
  I hoped to woo him away from the University of Alabama.
  Marlon had been an outstanding addition to my office, as an astute 
emergency room physician who thrived on the give and take of the 
Senate. His work on many issues, particularly anti-tobacco efforts and 
radiation compensation, stands out.
  Marlon would have been a fantastic Hill staffer. And we would have 
benefitted greatly by his presence.
  But, you know what? He said to me, ``Senator, as attractive as this 
offer is, I am almost 50 years old. If I come to the Senate, I can't 
practice medicine. I will lose my license. And when you leave office, I 
will no longer have a medical career. I just can't take that chance.''
  That was our loss.
  Similarly, it is our loss if Dr. Coburn cannot practice medicine 
while he is a Senator. It is the loss of this body, which can benefit 
so much by his expertise, and it is the loss of Oklahoma, the Nation, 
and indeed the world, if he cannot practice medicine.
  Some have suggested, in error I believe, that medical doctors should 
be treated no differently than other professions, such as lawyers.
  There is a big difference between those two professions.
  I can serve here as a lawyer, and I do not lose my license.
  That is not true for a doctor.
  With all due respect to my colleagues on the Ethics Committee, and 
their staff, the ruling by the Ethics Committee is a bureaucratic 
response to a non-problem.
  Dr. Coburn is not asking to make a profit here.
  He has sworn to the committee and to this body that a reasonable 
reinterpretation of the Senate rules should allow him to practice 
medicine on a not-for-profit basis.
  There is no conflict there.
  But even more, I find it so commendable that Dr. Coburn has pledged 
to his constituents that he will be a citizen legislator, a central 
part of his Senate campaign.
  If Dr. Coburn wants to honor and restore the long-standing tradition 
in this body of serving as citizen legislators, then so be it. More 
power to him.
  And as I noted in the case of my former staffer, a doctor cannot 
become a Senate employee and retain his or her licensure.
  So as a consequence, for all practical purposes, dedicated medical 
professionals, be they Dr. Frist, Dr. Coburn, Dr. Priest, or any other 
doctor, dentist, nurse or other health care worker, cannot give their 
expertise to the Senate on any extended basis.
  What we are asking for here is not a conflict of interest by any 
means.
  There would be no profit motive, indeed no profit. So what is the 
conflict?
  Indeed, as Dr. Coburn has noted, no pregnant woman will choose him 
hoping to sway his vote.
  I think it is also safe to conclude with Dr. Coburn's notation that 
no PhRMA representatives will line up for a physical at the Oklahoma 
Senator's office.
  Mr. President, I think that any objective analysis of the facts would 
yield one conclusion: the Senate and the American people benefit by 
having doctors serve here.
  We should be turning cartwheels that we have such talented 
individuals as Dr. Frist and Dr. Coburn who want to share their 
expertise with the Senate and our country.
  The rules should encourage their working here, not discourage it.
  I hope my colleagues will agree.
  All I can say is this.
  This is a good man.
  He is in it for the right reasons.
  This amendment will ensure he keeps his medical privileges active.
  He is not going to make any profit from it, but he will be able to 
pay for his medical liability insurance.
  Most of all, he will be able to help unfortunate people, patients who 
believe in him, patients this good doctor helps so selflessly. I think 
everybody in the Senate should feel happy they have enabled our 
colleague to continue a vital, valuable medical practice without any 
hint of ethical compromise. That is what this amendment is intended to 
do, and I urge that it be adopted.
  I hope our colleagues will give some consideration to this issue and 
allow this man the privilege of doing this. I will be very disappointed 
if we don't.
  I thank my dear friend from Mississippi for granting me this time.
  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, again, I know we will need to alternate back 
and forth. As a courtesy to a colleague, I yield 5 minutes to the 
Senator from Pennsylvania, Mr. Specter.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.
  Mr. SPECTER. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Senator from

[[Page 27019]]

Mississippi for filing his resolution and for yielding me a few minutes 
to talk about the merits. I support the resolution. I believe it would 
enhance the Senate to have Senator Coburn continue his medical practice 
on a basis where he does not seek a profit, where he covers his 
expenses, and where he continues to perform very important medical 
services for many people who are his patients now and who may become 
his patients.
  When the issue arises as to whether it interferes with Senator 
Coburn's duties and responsibilities in the Senate, I believe I am in a 
position to answer that question, categorically, based upon what he has 
done for a year in the Senate, where I have had very close contact with 
him on the Judiciary Committee.
  He is prompt in attendance. We have grave difficulties maintaining a 
quorum but not because of Senator Coburn. He lends an expertise which 
is absent. We had hearings today on the asbestos reform bill, and 
Senator Coburn was cross-examining the medical witnesses in a way that 
regular Senators, plain Senators, even though they have some experience 
in questioning witnesses, can't do. I said to Senator Coburn, after the 
hearing concluded, that he might be in the wrong profession; he ought 
to be practicing cross-examination. He thought that was related to 
being a lawyer. He didn't like that suggestion very much, but it was 
made only in jest.
  He knows things as a result of his medical profession that the rest 
of us do not know. We have a great many professionals in this body but 
not medical professionals. There is no conflict of interest, as the 
Senator from Utah, Mr. Hatch, commented about lawyers and a profit 
motive and there might be some connection between representing clients 
in matters to come before the Senate. That is not the situation with 
Senator Coburn.
  There is no conflict of interest. In fact, there is a substantial 
confluence of interest. That may be a new phrase. If I could attract 
Senator Coburn's attention, I said there is a confluence of interest 
with his work as a doctor and with his work as a Senator.
  While I agree with the limitations generally, I think they do not 
apply to Senator/Dr. Coburn's situation. I believe the resolution ought 
to be adopted.
  Again, I thank my colleague from Mississippi. I yield the floor.
  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I yield myself such time as I may consume so 
I can get into some of the specifics of the resolution.
  The resolution simply provides that a Senator who is a physician can 
continue to practice in his profession while serving in the Senate. 
However, there is an important caveat included in this resolution. A 
Senator who continues to practice medicine may not receive fees and 
other payments for medical services that exceed the actual and 
necessary expenses incurred by the Senator in connection with his 
medical practice. In other words, the Senator cannot make a profit from 
his practice.
  I have discussed this issue with a lot of our colleagues. There are 
those who are concerned that once we open this door, we will open it 
more and more and there will be more and more exceptions to the rule. 
That is not my intent here. That is a debate for another day, and maybe 
we should have it, in my opinion. This is narrowly crafted legislation 
that would allow for Senator Coburn to continue his practice.
  I think he should have that opportunity. I think it is fair to him, 
and I think it is needed in his community. In talking with him, it is 
not that he is an obstetrician/gynecologist, he is a general 
practitioner. He treats people who come to him for all kinds of 
problems. We have a need for more, not less, doctors.
  Also, there is a unique difference we have to remember. As lawyers, I 
guess as long as you keep your bar membership up, when we leave here, 
oh, yes, we are still lawyers because we got a law degree 40 years ago. 
But as a doctor, if you don't keep up your practice, you can't go back 
and say, Oh great, I will take care of your gynecological needs or 
deliver a baby. They need to keep their skills honed.
  Some people say he can practice, he just can't have any income to 
cover his expenses. Based on the Senate salary, he would not be able to 
pay for the expenses, primarily because of the exorbitant amount of 
money now that is involved in medical malpractice.
  I note that allowing a physician to continue practicing medicine to 
the extent of covering actual costs is consistent with an approach that 
was taken by the House of Representatives. I think it is a very 
critical point. We are going to have more of a disallowance over here 
than even the House. This matter was worked through a very lengthy 
process in the House, and they came to the conclusion they needed to 
have this exception.
  Moreover, the definition of compensation contained in the resolution 
is identical to the definition used in the U.S. Office of Government 
Ethics.
  The resolution applies only to physicians who practice as sole 
practitioners and only when the Senate is not in session. So there is 
not going to be a conflict with his responsibilities. Knowing this 
Senator from Oklahoma, as we all do already, he would never do that. He 
wouldn't fly home and start delivering babies when we were having 
votes.
  It also limits it to a sole-practitioner role. The resolution retains 
the current Senate rule that prohibits a Senator from affiliating with 
a firm. In addition, the current rule that prohibits a Senator's name 
from being used by any affiliated firm or company is retained.
  Physicians need to continue to practice in order to maintain their 
skills, as I noted. Because we have not been able to get medical 
malpractice insurance reform, it costs hundreds of thousands of 
dollars, in many cases, to stay in practice. We all hear from our 
doctors about how difficult that is getting to be. I think it is 
probably even more difficult if you are an OB/GYN to pay the fees that 
are involved for providing this medical service.
  Should a Senator who is a physician have to be recertified to 
practice when he leaves the Senate because he has been unable to 
maintain his practice because of Senate rules? I don't believe he 
should have that additional responsibility. We are putting an 
additional burden on physicians who would serve in the Senate. We need 
more diversity here, not less, even though we have had doctors 
throughout history serve in the Senate. Most of them--in fact, I guess 
all of them until very recent history--continued to practice medicine. 
It was never a problem. I am sure the Senator from Oklahoma is going to 
give us a history of doctors and physicians in the Senate and what they 
did. I am sure he is going to give us the history of lawyers who 
continued to practice, great Members of the Congress and Senate who 
went on to become President.
  I think we are setting up a situation that is indefensible. It is not 
just about this Senator. I want to make the point, too, about why we 
are doing it this way. I don't want to take away the responsibilities 
of the Ethics Committee to interpret the rules. I hoped this would be 
worked out. We have a time problem now. At some point soon, the Senator 
from Oklahoma is going to have to decide what to do: Is he going to 
completely shut down his practice or what is he going to do? There are 
certain limits on how long he has to close out his practice.
  I would like the Rules Committee to have acted on this issue, but 
there is the issue of getting the matter through the Rules Committee 
and then getting it scheduled for time on the floor. We are doing it 
this way because it is the only way it could be done. I think the 
Senator at least deserves to have his case considered.
  The current Senate rules do not completely bar outside profit by 
Senators, I should note. Many Senators now are writing books, and they 
are able to keep the royalties. There is an ethics exception, I 
believe, for teaching classes, and that is earned income. Yet that 
exception is made. Of course, if you are a Senator and you marry a 
person with money or if you inherit money, that is fine. But if you 
have an ability, a talent that you can offer, a service that you can 
provide, even if you do it not for profit, no, you can't do that.

[[Page 27020]]

  I am very concerned about what we are doing to ourselves. I practiced 
law. I looked at staying affiliated with a law firm. I think I could 
have practiced estate law without running afoul of the ethics rules, 
but you could not do that.
  This is a narrow exception that I think is the fair way to allow this 
Senator to continue his practice without conflicting with the ethics 
rules or with his duties. This is a profession we need more of, I 
repeat.
  I hope my colleagues will seriously consider this modest exception to 
the rules of the Senate. This is a Senator who wants to continue 
serving the medical needs of his constituents without earning a profit. 
That is pretty magnanimous, it seems to me. I think we should do this. 
I think what we are doing to this Senator and the people he serves is 
wrong. At least he will have a vote, and I hope that maybe sometime 
later we will consider this whole issue in a broader sense. But for 
now, we should make this narrow exception, as the House of 
Representatives did in the past.
  I yield the floor, Mr. President.
  Do we want to alternate. How much time does the Senator desire? I 
yield 5 minutes to the Senator from South Carolina.
  Mr. GRAHAM. Mr. President, I thank the Senator. I stand here in two 
capacities: speaking as a Senator trying to find a compromise that 
would be good for the institution and as a friend of Tom Coburn.
  If I had any doubt about the effect this would have on the 
institution, I would not rise in support of my friend, because we all 
know why we are here. We are here to make the country stronger and the 
Senate better. Having Tom Coburn here as a physician I think makes the 
country stronger and better.
  It is not about him making money. All of us know Senator Coburn and 
what he does in Oklahoma. He is not practicing medicine to make money. 
He is practicing medicine to stay in touch with his constituents, to 
provide a vital service to rural Oklahoma, and to try to pay the bills. 
He is doing it for all the right reasons.
  You can, as Senator Lott said, have outside income. This is not about 
outside income. This is about trying to maintain the skills that are 
very much in demand in Oklahoma and a relationship that I think will be 
beneficial to the people he serves and the Senate as a whole.
  The bottom line is, it worked in the House. They had the same debate 
in the House. They had a compromise where Senator Coburn could practice 
medicine not for a profit but for the privilege of serving his 
constituents in two ways: as a Representative and a doctor. It worked 
very well. It was a win-win. It can be a win-win for the Senate. 
Physicians who served in the Senate in the past have been allowed to 
practice.
  Perception is important. We don't want to do anything in the Senate 
on our watch that would give a perception that the body is not at its 
highest level. And reality is important too. I think the reality of 
allowing Dr. Coburn to continue to practice in the Senate, such as he 
did in the House, is extremely beneficial to real people who need a 
good doctor who is competent at delivering medical care and who has a 
great heart for serving people. Those individuals need the Senate to 
understand they are affected, and whatever perception problems anybody 
is worried about, it did not hurt the House at all, and it is not going 
to hurt the Senate.
  The reality is there are people counting on Dr. Coburn, and it would 
be a shame for them to be denied medical care from a very good man.
  From the Senate's point of view, I think it would be good for us to 
have a commonsense view of what our role in society is, that we are not 
a body that should be totally disconnected from everyday life. If you 
can have a Member of the body serving in a very vital capacity that 
improves everyday life, then we ought to let that happen. It would be a 
win-win for the Senate, and it would be a win-win for the people of 
Oklahoma.
  I am here to say that Tom Coburn is not only a great Senator, he is a 
great doctor, and he practices medicine for all the right reasons. Any 
perception problem should not stand between him and the ability to 
deliver a vital service. We are not reduced as a body by him taking 
care of people in Oklahoma. I think we are enhanced.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I believe I manage the time in opposition 
on this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has that right.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Accordingly, I yield 20 minutes to the chairman of the 
Ethics Committee, Senator Voinovich.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
  Mr. VOINOVICH. Mr. President, first I would like to say I have a 
great deal of respect for Senator Coburn. I think he is acting from 
honorable motives. I would remind Senators that our colleague, Senator 
Frist, is a doctor and is not asking for dispensation from the rule. He 
continues to practice without compensation on occasion.
  I have been hopeful that working in a truly bipartisan manner with 
the Ethics Committee, which I chair, the Rules Committee, our 
bipartisan leadership, and Senator Coburn, that we could come to an 
agreement which would address Senator Coburn's concerns.
  While I would like to be able to detail the long history of the 
Ethics Committee's work to find an accommodation with Senator Coburn to 
effectively address his concerns, in an effort to maintain the 
privileged nature of the communications between the committee and the 
Senator, I must speak only in generalities.
  Let me assure my colleagues that we have done everything that the 
Senate rules will allow us to do to help Senator Coburn in this matter. 
I can assure you that Senator Johnson and I have spent a great deal of 
time, and the staff of the Ethics Committee as well, trying to 
accommodate Senator Coburn. Ultimately, we found ourselves in a 
situation where we were asked to reinterpret what the Senate rules 
meant or to endorse a change of those rules for Senator Coburn. As I 
will soon detail, the specific language and legislative history of 
Senate Rules XXXVI and XXXVII and Federal law prevent us from 
reinterpreting the rules. With regard to changing the rules themselves, 
we did not believe the Ethics Committee should be involved in the sole 
jurisdiction of the Rules Committee.
  As my colleagues know, the Rules Committee establishes the rules of 
the Senate. The Ethics Committee is charged with enforcing those rules. 
This matter should not be on the Senate floor. It should be before the 
Rules Committee of the Senate.
  Despite these realities and all the work to accommodate Senator 
Coburn over the past year, here we are considering a sense-of-the-
Senate resolution to clarify Senate Rule XXXVII in an effort to put 
pressure on the Senate Ethics Committee to reinterpret what 
``compensation'' means. Unfortunately, this resolution has not been 
approved or considered by the Rules Committee. There have been no 
hearings on this matter in the Rules Committee. Nevertheless, here we 
are.
  First, allow me to lay out the Senate rules which guided the Ethics 
Committee's determination on the Coburn matter.
  Senate Rule XXXVII prohibits Senators from, No. 1, affiliating with a 
firm, partnership, association, or corporation for the purpose of 
providing professional services for compensation; 2, permitting his or 
her name to be used by a firm, partnership, association, or corporation 
which provides professional services for compensation; and 3, 
practicing a profession for compensation to any extent during regular 
office hours of the employing Senate office.
  The Senate Ethics Manual, the meat the committee provides the Senate 
for the bones of the Senate's rules, indicates on page 71 that Rule 
XXXVII ``prohibits the paid practice of fiduciary professions,'' which 
includes the medical profession. On page 72, the manual indicates that 
the rule applies to ``payment for professional services.''

[[Page 27021]]

This is important because it goes to the heart of why the committee 
determined that Senator Coburn's proposal to allow him to receive 
reimbursement for expense in lieu of compensation should not be 
approved.
  Senator Coburn has publicly stated that the purpose behind his effort 
today is to allow him to receive reimbursement to cover the medical 
malpractice costs associated with providing medical care. He believes 
that in order to maintain his medical skills and licenses and in order 
to be a ``citizen legislator,'' he should be allowed to receive this 
compensation.
  Again, to be absolutely clear, as chairman of the Ethics Committee, 
my job is to provide Senators guidance to help them comply with our 
rules. Our rules clearly state that payment of any kind for any purpose 
for fiduciary work is prohibited. Rule XXXVII prohibits exactly what 
Senator Coburn is asking for today.
  The Senate looked at this exact specific situation in 1977. Senator 
Thurmond, with whom a good number of us had the opportunity to serve--
and this is 1977--served as cochair with Senator Gaylord Nelson of the 
Special Committee on Official Conduct. This committee was charged with 
developing the original Senate Code of Conduct upon which many of our 
current Senate ethics rules are based. Senator Thurmond said on the 
Senate floor in 1977:

       If [doctors] value their duties and they want to keep up, 
     they can visit hospitals and go out and participate, so long 
     as they do not do it for compensation.

  Additionally, the Nelson committee report formed the basis for what 
is now Rule XXXVI and addresses the possibility of outside earned 
income. Specifically, the report states:

       During its deliberation on this Rule, the Committee was 
     aware of clear and unmistakable practical facts of political 
     life. For example, most Americans regard service in the 
     Senate as a full-time job.

  And I can say that was 1977. This is 2005. I can say that I think it 
is more of a full-time job today than it was back in 1977.

       Senators work long hours devoting a substantial amount of 
     not only their own time, but also time that they could be 
     with their families, attending to Senate business on behalf 
     of their constituents.

  Consistent with these duties is the notion that since service in the 
Senate is a full-time job, considerable skepticism is often raised in 
the minds of the public whenever outside earned income is received by a 
Senator because of personal services outside regular Senate duties.
  Now, this is to be differentiated from other outside income like 
farming because the personal services or fiduciary relationship is 
fundamentally different. A Senator engaged in farming is not put in the 
situation where he or she would have to choose between tending to their 
fields or serving a constituent. A doctor, who is in a fiduciary 
relationship, could face a situation where he had to choose between 
constituents and providing medical treatment for a patient. Writing a 
book is not a fiduciary relationship and would not interfere with a 
Senator's business because he can pick it up and lay it down.
  Not only do our own rules and history prevent the arrangement that 
Senator Coburn is asking for, but Federal law does as well. The Ethics 
Reform Act of 1989, enshrined as paragraph 5(b) of Rule XXXVII, 
explicitly prohibits Senators from entering into professional fiduciary 
relationships. The rule, again based on the Ethics Reform Act, 
prohibits:

       (1) receive compensation for affiliating with or being 
     employed by a firm, partnership, association, corporation, or 
     other entity which provides professional services involving a 
     fiduciary relationship.
       (2) permit that Member's, officer's, or employee's name to 
     be used by any such firm, partnership, association, 
     corporation, or other entity.
       (3) receive compensation for practicing a profession which 
     involves a fiduciary relationship.

  There may be an argument made to the Senate today that the 
``compensation'' that Rules XXXVI and XXXVII and Ethics Reform Act 
refer to is profit. We may hear that the resolution we are considering 
encourages the Ethics Committee to define compensation as money 
received for costs or that compensation should only apply to for-profit 
enterprises or that ``breaking even'' is not compensation. Well, allow 
me to share some facts for the Senate to consider on what 
``compensation'' means.
  Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code finds that gross income 
includes ``compensation for services including fees, commissions, 
fringe benefits and similar items.''
  The U.S. Court of Claims held in 1968 ``that the statutory definition 
of gross income is broad enough to include as compensation any economic 
or financial benefit from any source, conferred in any form on any 
employee, unless specifically exempted by statute.''
  Nowhere in the Internal Revenue Code or in our case law will one find 
``compensation'' defined as ``breaking even.''
  Let me raise some other facts. The Federal Acquisition Regulation 
defines compensation as ``all remuneration paid or accrued for services 
rendered by the employees to the contractor during the period of the 
contract performance.''
  Again, in contracts with the Federal Government, breaking even is not 
an option.
  Finally, allow me to offer one more piece of information for my 
colleagues to consider when the ``actual and necessary expense'' 
argument is made on behalf of this resolution. The Code of Federal 
Regulations, 5 CFR section 2636.303(b), states:

       Outside earned income and compensation both mean wages, 
     salaries, honoraria, commission, professional fees and other 
     forms of compensation for services other than salary benefits 
     and allowances paid by the United States Government.

  Again, the idea of defining compensation as profit is not considered 
in our Federal Code.
  Finally, allow me to offer some thoughts on what changing the 
committee's interpretation of rules XXXVI and XXXVII, the Ethics Reform 
Act, the Internal Revenue Code, findings of the U.S. Court of Claims, 
and our Federal Code would mean.
  Enforcement of this rule change will be impossible. The Ethics 
Committee would need to hire a small army of auditors and accountants 
to effectively evaluate what expenses were actual and necessary as the 
resolution would allow. These accountants would need to have some 
specific, specialized knowledge in the medical field to evaluate if the 
expenses Senator Coburn had were ``actual and necessary.'' Frankly, the 
committee is not equipped to handle this responsibility. Moreover, I do 
not believe that the committee should be asked to take this on.
  The rule change would inevitably lead to violations. I can hardly 
envision a scenario in which every procedure Dr. Coburn is involved 
with is billed exactly at the actual and necessary expenses. While Dr. 
Coburn does have a degree in accounting, I believe that should he be 
permitted to practice medicine, his focus should be on his patients, 
not on his accounts receivable. If his rates were to exceed or fall 
short of his actual or necessary expenses, he would be in violation and 
subject to an Ethics Committee violation. No one wants that.
  The rule change would lead to other calls for changes from our 
colleagues that are fraught with even more dangers. Why should we not 
provide the same arrangement to our two colleagues who are 
veterinarians? Do they not need to continue their practices to maintain 
their skills and licenses? Is this not their chosen profession and one 
that they may want to return to eventually? How long will it be before 
one of the many excellent lawyers amongst us will ask to practice but 
only receive actual and necessary expenses? If we decide today to allow 
a colleague to pursue their profession and receive compensation to 
cover their expenses, how will the committee say no to other requests 
like this? This is the slippery slope and one that I believe we must 
carefully avoid.
  Again, I am sorry this matter has come to the floor of the Senate. I 
believe Senator Coburn means well in his

[[Page 27022]]

efforts today. He wants to continue his services as a doctor to help 
people. I applaud that altruistic commitment to public service. Rather 
than debating the possibility of reinterpreting our rules, we should be 
talking about a real, practical solution that would allow Senator 
Coburn to continue serving people and to maintain his medical skills 
and licenses.
  The committee has long indicated to Senators that they could provide 
medical services to patients on a volunteer basis where no compensation 
is received, as the Senate majority leader does, and we are very 
familiar with it.
  The committee has indicated to Senators, consistent with Senator 
Thurmond's comments in 1977, that they can pursue a volunteer 
relationship with a VA hospital in their home States or in Washington 
at Walter Reed or at the Bethesda Medical Center where no compensation 
is provided. I understand they have arrangements to cover the 
malpractice insurance of doctors who operate there, so that malpractice 
problem would not occur.
  Unfortunately, instead of congratulating Senator Coburn for finding a 
solution that will allow him to continue practicing, we are debating a 
Senate resolution to instruct the Senate Ethics Committee to ignore 
Rules XXXVI and XXXVII, the Ethics Reform Act, and definitions of 
compensation that are in Federal statute. We cannot do that.
  With that, I urge my colleagues to reject this effort, and I raise a 
point of order that the Coburn amendment is not germane to the 
underlying bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The point of order must be made at the 
conclusion of all debate.
  Mr. VOINOVICH. Mr. President, I would ask the Chair to remind me of 
that.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I yield 3 minutes to the Senator from 
Arizona.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
  Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I lend my strong support for the amendment 
offered by Senator Lott. It is measured, it is common sense, and it 
will help to allow Members of the Senate in the medical profession to 
function on a not-for-profit basis--I emphasize again, not-for-profit 
basis.
  Dr. Coburn is not fabulously wealthy. He needs to be able to break 
even. If one Member of the Senate is very wealthy and can afford to 
carry out medical duties without adequate compensation for it, that is 
fine.
  He is not seeking permission to shirk his Senate responsibilities in 
any way. I also appreciate the fact that he does not want to walk away 
from the medical profession. We need people with hands-on health care 
experience. One of the greatest challenges we face in the coming years 
is health care costs and health care issues. Would it not be wonderful 
to have a person who has daily hands-on experience with these health 
care issues, which is $40 trillion in unfunded liability in the case of 
Medicare?
  He is not turning Senate rules on their head. Somebody is going to 
have to explain to me how we can have a blind trust and make money from 
a blind trust, but we cannot make money from a break-even standpoint in 
the practice of medicine.
  It is bizarre. It is bizarre.
  He has demonstrated he is more than a full-time legislator. He has 
offered dozens of amendments on bills in his first year in office, not 
making every Member of the Senate happy when he is doing so. No one can 
question his tenacity, his work ethic. As chairman of the Senate 
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on Federal 
Financial Management, Senator Coburn has already held 20 oversight 
hearings.
  I believe Senator Coburn can walk and chew gum. I believe he can 
practice medicine when he is back with his constituents in Oklahoma and 
serve that State even more admirably, serving them in more capabilities 
than one. I wish I had the capabilities the doctor from Oklahoma has.
  I hope there is an overwhelming vote in favor of the Lott motion.
  I appreciate the courtesy of my colleagues.
  I yield.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Dakota.
  Mr. JOHNSON. Mr. President, I ask to address the body for 5 minutes 
on this issue.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. JOHNSON. Mr. President, I rise today as vice chair of the Ethics 
Committee to discuss the resolution being considered by the Senate. I 
say at the outset that I have great respect for my colleague, Senator 
Coburn. The resolution before us seeks to provide a special carve-out 
for the practice of medicine, and medicine only, from the current 
Senate rules limiting outside compensation and income.
  The Senate rules that govern this issue and their interpretation do 
not come at the whim of the Senate Rules or Senate Ethics Committees, 
but from a longstanding determination and precedent of this body. In 
fact, this has been a part of the Senate rules since 1977, when the 
original Senate Code of Conduct was adopted.
  The committee that was established to develop the Senate Code of 
Conduct was known as the Nelson Committee, after its chairman, Senator 
Gaylord Nelson, and specifically addressed the restrictions on Senators 
practicing fiduciary professions in its report by saying:

       This provision reflects the committee's belief that the 
     practice of a profession usually requires substantial amounts 
     of personal involvement and time, and may also present 
     conflicts of interest or in some cases the appearance of such 
     conflicts.

  During the Senate debate in 1977 on these rules, Senator Strom 
Thurmond delivered a strong statement on the purpose and the intent 
behind including the prohibition on Members of the Senate from 
continuing to practice and being compensated for outside professional 
work. He said:

       The job of a U.S. Senator is a full-time job, and if one is 
     able to find time to render professional services for 
     compensation, I seriously question his ability to render the 
     commensurate service necessary to be a full-time Senator.

  At that time, the Nelson Committee and the Senate recognized the 
pitfalls of allowing Members to receive income or compensation for 
outside professional work. Those pitfalls still exist today.
  First, the proposal before the Senate would create a net profit 
standard in conjunction with medical professionals accepting outside 
compensation. It is my understanding this would allow physicians to 
accept payments for services from such sources as individuals, 
insurance companies, or even Medicare and Medicaid, up to the point at 
which all of their expenses have been covered.
  A major concern I have about this proposal is it does not contain any 
direction as to how compliance with this net profit standard would be 
monitored to ensure that the instant all expenses were covered, the 
compensation would be ended. Without a clear ability to monitor 
compliance, the potential for violations, abuse of the system, or even 
mistakes that would affect the credibility of this Senate is very high.
  I question whether the Ethics Committee has, or in fact whether it 
should have, the resources that would be required to properly analyze 
the complex accounting needed to ensure compliance with this net profit 
standard.
  Furthermore, at this time I simply do not believe the Senate should 
vote in favor of any proposal that would loosen our ethical boundaries 
and increase the opportunities for ethical violations.
  The resolution also does not provide any limitations on the outside 
practice of medicine. It appears that under this resolution, a Senator 
could spend a majority, if not all, of his or her time practicing 
medicine, to the detriment of the Senate, and without any recourse for 
the Senate.
  As stated before, the Senate has determined our responsibilities are 
full-time. If the proposal before us is adopted, it will set up a 
conflict between constituents and a Senator's outside medical 
responsibilities for which he or she is being compensated.
  The question has been raised about whether this carve-out ought to 
apply

[[Page 27023]]

only to the medical profession. The fact is there are other 
professionals in this body of great skill--lawyers, engineers, business 
people, people of other professions. The fact is each and every one of 
them could practice their professions outside their service in the 
Senate, and without that practice, their skills, indeed, do erode as 
well. There are lawyers here whose membership in the bar is retained 
but whose skills certainly do erode over time. That is true of every 
profession. There is no profession, I believe, that is immune from or 
more prone to profit motives, and I do not think that any profession 
can be singled out in that regard.
  I am not completely insensitive to the motivations behind the 
resolution, but I remind my colleagues that there is nothing in the 
Senate Rules that forbids a physician in the Senate from practicing 
medicine, as the Senate leader, Senator Frist, oftentimes does. The 
argument here is not that doctors who serve in the Senate should never 
be allowed to practice medicine. The rules allow doctors serving in the 
Senate to practice medicine for free. The argument is that no Senator 
should practice a profession of any kind and receive outside 
compensation, no matter what the expenses of that particular profession 
might be.
  If there is going to be a change, then the proper place for that 
change is through the Rules Committee and the ordinary process where 
hearings can be held and thoughtful deliberation can be had, and the 
parliamentary rules of this body would apply. It would be a mistake and 
an unfortunate precedent for this body to permit an end run around the 
Rules Committee in order to avoid the supermajority vote that 
ordinarily would be required to change the rules during the middle of a 
congressional session.
  I do not believe we should take a step today to weaken the Senate 
rules, and I encourage my colleagues to oppose this resolution.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
  Mr. COBURN. I yield 4 minutes to the Senator from South Carolina.
  Mr. DeMINT. Mr. President, a vote for this amendment is a vote to 
restore the original purpose of an ethics rule. It was a rule developed 
to keep special interests from unduly influencing Members of the Senate 
by forbidding us from receiving outside income while serving here, on 
either side of the Congress. But, as the Government often does, we seem 
to have forgotten the original purpose of this rule and are now 
focusing on a technical interpretation. We are asking for some common 
sense.
  The patients of a doctor delivering babies, many times a poor 
Medicaid mother, are not going to influence the votes of Members of the 
Senate. Senator Lott has mentioned a number of exceptions that already 
occur. The House, acting on the same rule, decided to allow Dr. Coburn 
to continue to deliver babies because of the benefit to this 
institution as well as the benefit to his patients.
  Senator Lott mentioned other exceptions we already make for each 
other. We can receive millions from a book. But even more important, 
every Member of this Senate receives compensation every time we travel 
to speak to a group in different parts of this country. It is 
compensation only to cover expenses, but it is still compensation. And 
many Members of this Senate are still involved with businesses and take 
passive income and help to make some management decisions. It is 
compensation, but it is not direct compensation.
  Senator Coburn's situation is very similar. He is providing an 
important service, often to poor mothers, and he does not want to make 
a profit, only to cover his expenses. My appeal to my colleagues 
tonight is to remember the purpose of these ethics rules.
  These women are not going to influence votes. The only time he spends 
is when we are not in session here.
  Let's straighten out one other thing, if we could. This amendment is 
not to help Dr. Coburn. It is about allowing him to help others, which 
is what he is doing on the weekends. He is not making any profit from 
doing this. He is serving others as he has done for years. But it is 
also about helping us, as an institution, to keep contact with people 
in the real world and the problems they have--on his own time.
  I encourage my fellow colleagues to remember the purpose, to use some 
common sense, and to allow Dr. Coburn to continue to serve his 
constituents in ways that many of us are often doing in different ways.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I yield 10 minutes to the Senator from Connecticut, Mr. 
Dodd.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. DODD. Mr. President, let me begin by saying these are the sorts 
of uncomfortable moments in the Senate when we start to deal with each 
other on a personal level. I have been in this body for 24 years and I 
take no comfort in engaging in this kind of discussion. But as the 
ranking Democrat on the Rules Committee, serving with my friend and 
colleague from Mississippi, Trent Lott, as the chairman of the 
committee, I felt it was important to at least express to my colleagues 
here the position this Senator has as a member of that committee and as 
a former chairman of the Rules Committee.
  Very simply stated, as a matter of process--putting aside for a 
second the arguments on behalf of our colleague from Oklahoma and his 
noble determination and desire to continue the profession in which he 
has been engaged for years--there is a means by which we go through 
changes in the rules in this body. We have established that process for 
orderly reasons. What is being suggested here by this amendment is a 
change in the rules of the Senate, and there is a committee established 
by this body to consider such proposals.
  There is nothing in the rules of the Senate which prohibits any 
Member of this body from engaging in the practice of a profession, 
except as constrained by Rules XXXVI and XXXVII. As the Senator from 
Ohio has pointed out, what is being suggested here is that a member be 
allowed to earn some level of compensation in order to defray certain 
expenses. That would require a modification of Rule XXXVI and/or 
XXXVII.
  There is a way of doing that and the way is, you come to the Rules 
Committee, you have a hearing, you listen to witnesses. A person can 
make a suggestion to modify the rules. We do that all the time. If the 
Rules Committee decides in its wisdom it believes the rules ought to be 
modified or changed, then we recommend that change to this body as a 
whole and we move forward and accommodate a request such as the Senator 
from Oklahoma is making. But to bypass all of that process, even if you 
believe strongly that what the Senator from Oklahoma is suggesting he 
ought to be allowed to do, we ought to be following the process here. 
You would be setting a precedent, even if you agree with my colleague 
from Oklahoma and what he suggests here.
  There is a way by which you do things here. When you begin to 
sidestep and short circuit the process, then you put the entire process 
in jeopardy. I begin by stating that to my colleagues. Even if you feel 
strongly--and I say I know many of my colleagues do, and I have 
listened to the remarks over the last several minutes in support of 
Senator Coburn's request--there is a process which we should go through 
to achieve that end. I urge the body, if for no other reason than that, 
to support the motion that will be made by the Senator from Ohio.
  Then if the Senator desires to go forward with this, I certainly 
would be willing--I say this to my colleagues here; my colleague from 
Mississippi is not here--but if he wants to have a hearing on this 
matter, I will attend the hearing. I will attend all the hearings on it 
and listen to witnesses come forward and then consider the proposed 
change in the rules. If that is what we want to do, we ought to do that 
process. But I am uneasy about bypassing that process.
  As I said earlier, there is nothing in the Senate Rules that 
precludes a

[[Page 27024]]

Member of this body from practicing a profession while in public 
service. But that practice is limited by Rules XXXVI and XXXVII and 
limitations on compensation earned in a fiduciary relationship. The 
history of these provisions shows that they are designed to ensure the 
membership in a profession does not so impose on the responsibilities 
of a Senator as to effectively render the Member a part-time public 
servant.
  Again, there are circumstances which could be pointed out which I am 
sure would cause us to consider some changes in all this, but there is 
a process to go through. When the Founding Fathers envisioned citizen 
legislators some more than 200 years ago, they did not envision the 
kind of world we live in today and a Congress, today, that meets not 
only year round but often throughout the day, well into the night. 
Witness this evening. We are likely going to be here until 10 or 11 
o'clock tonight debating these amendments on the reconciliation bill. 
We may be here tomorrow and Saturday and Sunday.
  Certainly, the Founding Fathers had times when that occurred but not 
with the regularity that we engage in these practices. My colleague, 
the chairman of the Rules Committee, whom I have referenced already, 
suggests that Senator Coburn will not fly home and deliver babies when 
there are votes.
  I can personally bear witness to this--I am sure my colleague from 
Oklahoma will verify this--that babies don't normally set their time 
for delivery based on the Senate schedule. I can say as the father of 
two new recent arrivals that they decided to arrive not during the 
Senate schedule; they had their own schedule for arrival. Even though 
we may try to accommodate our colleagues in these areas, it doesn't 
normally occur on any sort of predictable pattern. It is not elective 
surgery, in most cases.
  Moreover, while I am sympathetic to the concerns that physicians 
should maintain their skills. In fact, I relish the fact that we have 
Senator Coburn here as a physician, along with Senator Frist and the 
two Members before our body who are veterinarians, who add, I think, to 
the discussion and debate. It adds a dimension to our deliberations. 
But again, we have four Members of this body who practice medicine--two 
who practice the human variety and two who practice the animal variety. 
I respect them immensely and enjoy speaking to them about their 
profession. But if we begin this process, what argument is there in 
response to my colleagues here who practice veterinary medicine? Should 
they no be able to seek to cover their costs? What about those who like 
to maintain their skill level as attorneys, engineers, or otherwise?
  We decided to put some parameters around this. Again, there is a 
process we can go through if we decide that we want to change it. It is 
not in any way to try to impugn the reputation or the contribution of 
Members. But to suggest that in this 21st century, we ought to begin to 
start compromising these rules in order to accommodate Members who wish 
to go back and practice their profession and to receive compensation, 
which is a critical element here, on their own time I think would be a 
step in the wrong direction. We have come some distance over the years.
  In the previous century, there were Members of this body who would go 
down on the first floor and try cases before the Supreme Court and then 
come back up here to vote on the very bills that might have changed the 
law.
  There was a wonderful Senator from New York, Chauncey Depew. He was 
the president of the New York Central Railroad while a Member of this 
body and never had a second thought about voting on railroad matters 
affecting the compensation of the company he was running. But, of 
course, the world has changed. I believe we are far better off today 
because we moved away from that kind of practice in the past.
  I am not suggesting that my colleague from Oklahoma is suggesting 
anything like the behavior that we saw in previous centuries. But, 
nonetheless, we have established some parameters. Again, that is the 
reason we have a process here by which we make modifications.
  The provisions in the rules are not biblical, they are not etched in 
marble or granite. They can be changed. But I suggest that if we are 
going to change them, we ought to go through the normal process of 
doing that. Taking up what is essentially a sense-of-the-Senate 
resolution on the tax reconciliation bill is not the way to go.
  Again, I say to my friend, we don't know each other terribly well. We 
haven't engaged in much business together, and I don't want the Senator 
to perceive what I am saying as disrespectful of his intent--I am not 
comfortable with these debates. My colleagues have known me over the 
past quarter of a century, and they know I try to stay away from these 
matters. It does begin to reflect or suggest somehow our feelings about 
one another. I don't want anything I have said here to suggest any 
negative feelings about my colleague because we disagree in the way at 
which we have arrived at this debate. This is really not an Ethics 
Committee matter. It is a Rules Committee matter, and that is where it 
belongs. We ought to consider it there and some of the questions and 
implications raised in this debate and then come forward. It may be 
that a majority of the Rules Committee will say the rule ought to be 
modified or changed. If that is the wisdom, then we come to the body, 
and have an informed debate. But we ought to be careful about trying to 
short circuit that process.
  I am going to support the motion by the Senator from Ohio. I urge my 
colleagues to do so--not in any way to impugn the motives of the 
Senator from Oklahoma but to protect the process of the Senate.
  With all due respect, that is a much larger question, it seems to me, 
than the ambition or desires of any one Member of this body. We bear 
responsibility to be good caretakers of this institution and to see to 
it that we preserve and protect the way in which we conduct ourselves. 
If we wish to change the means by which we do that, there is a process 
we should follow in doing so. Again, to bypass that process by bringing 
it directly to the floor I believe does potential damage to this 
institution that none of us should want to be party to.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I yield 4 minutes to the Senator from 
Nevada.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. ENSIGN. Mr. President, will you notify me when I have used 2 
minutes? I will try to keep this within 2 minutes. I wish to make a 
couple of points.
  I am a licensed veterinarian and am still currently licensed. When I 
was first elected to the Senate, when we were going through the ethics 
routine very similar to what they have in the House of Representatives, 
I still owned an animal hospital when I was in the House of 
Representatives. I never really gave it much thought because I heard 
you can own a small business. That is what it was--a small business. 
But as I was listening to the ethics briefings when I was elected to 
the Senate, I said: I don't think I can own my animal hospital. I don't 
think I can be partners anymore in the animal hospital.
  What I liked about owning my animal hospital was that I thought it 
kept me in touch with the real world; that we passed the Congressional 
Accountability Act because Congress was so out of touch with the laws 
that we passed up here for the real world. We were so out of touch, we 
said at least we should live under the same laws in our offices as they 
live out in the real world. I thought my veterinary practice allowed me 
to stay in touch with the real world much better.
  But I went to the Senate Ethics Committee and asked them about it, 
and they said, sure enough, you are going to have to sell the animal 
hospital. That wasn't something that I counted on when I was elected.
  I spoke to Don Nickles when it was all done, and he said he thought 
it was a disservice and that I should have fought it at the time, that 
I should have fought for a rule change back then.

[[Page 27025]]

  I apologize to Dr. Coburn for not fighting for a rule change back 
then. I don't think Dr. Coburn wants to go as far as he actually should 
be able to go or I should have been able to go. All he wants to do is 
break even because of the high cost of medical malpractice today and to 
be able to make enough money to be able to pay his premiums and stay in 
touch with his patients and practice medicine. Health care costs in 
this country are skyrocketing, and we need people who understand the 
practice of medicine and our health care system in the United States.
  I wholeheartedly support the Senator from Oklahoma in his efforts to 
do this. This is not the same as practicing law where you have somebody 
come down and lay down a retainer of $100,000 or $200,000 with the look 
of corruption that we may be trying to avoid. The practice of 
veterinary medicine isn't like that, and the practice of human medicine 
is not like that. This is somebody who will be a much better Senator if 
we allow him to practice; somebody who is going to be a better doctor. 
He is not going to be here forever, and we want him to keep his skills 
up because when he goes back to the practice of full-time medicine, he 
will still stay solvent.
  As we go forward in the debate, I hope people keep this in mind: 
Let's us put some common sense back in here. He is one of most ethical 
people I have ever met in my life, and to allow him to practice will 
make this institution a better institution.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from 
Oklahoma.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. INHOFE. Thank you.
  Mr. President, I may want to ask for a couple more minutes.
  First of all, let me state to the junior Senator from Oklahoma that I 
was not aware of this debate coming up. However, I don't have to 
practice for a debate; it comes from the heart.
  Let me also say to one of my best friends in the Senate, Senator 
Voinovich, that he is doing his job. We may come to a different 
conclusion on this particular issue, but I know he is in a real 
situation. You have shared that with several of us.
  Let me suggest to you, Mr. President, that there is something sadly 
lacking in this debate; that is, in the State of Oklahoma. There are 
only two of us in the Chamber from Oklahoma. We know what Oklahomans 
want. It is kind of interesting because Senator Coburn and I have kind 
of the same philosophy--we want to keep it the same place. We have 
different styles when we talk about trying to reduce the size of 
government. He talks about projects, and I talk about reducing 
appropriations. We both want to get to the same place. He has been an 
advocate and has talked about term limitation. I believe that everyone, 
if they don't want to go along with term limitations, ought to have to 
go out like I did and serve in the real world for 30 years, get beat up 
by the bureaucracy, and then you can come here and speak from the heart 
as a citizen back home.
  But when you look at our State of Oklahoma--and I read this section 
out of the U.S. Constitution, article I, section 4, which says the 
time, places, and manner of holding elections for the U.S. Senate 
preside in each State. That is what it says. That is what the Founding 
Fathers said--that we should make that determination from our own 
States. So here we are from the State of Oklahoma. We made the 
decision. And I have to say this: I know what people in Oklahoma want.
  One other thing Senator Coburn and I have in common is we go back 
every weekend. He may deliver a few babies while he is back there. But 
I would suggest to you, ask the question. A lot of people stay here in 
Washington all the time. Would you rather have your U.S. Senator 
staying in Washington and playing golf all weekend or going back to the 
State from which he came? We made a decision to go back.
  I have to say also that I have a bigger dog in this fight than most 
people think. I had the honor of going out many years ago and 
recruiting this bright young doctor to run for the U.S. House of 
Representatives. And he did. He came in and agreed to do that. He got 
an exception to allow him to work hard and still keep up his practice. 
He did that very successfully.
  I have to say this: When the Senator from Connecticut referred to a 
part-time Senator, which we hear now and then, let me tell you that 
there is no part-time Senator in Senator Coburn. I know this because we 
go back every weekend. I go around the State. I know what people want. 
The State of Oklahoma is not a Republican State or a Democrat State, it 
is a swing State. For him to come along and get in the race late--he 
got in the race so late for the U.S. Senate that I was already 
supporting another Republican. But when he got in and worked hard and 
went out, he won by 12 points. It wasn't a squeaker it was a landslide. 
And he was outspent by the other side.
  This is what we think in Oklahoma about Tom Coburn.
  You can talk all you want to about the rules in the Senate, but I can 
tell you right now that the Constitution is right when they say in 
article I, section 4, that the times, places, and manner of holding 
elections for the State for the office of Senator is within the State.
  I am here on behalf the State of Oklahoma, unlike anyone else who has 
spoken saying this is the right thing to do to carve out this 
exception, if you want to call it that, for Senator Coburn, he is a 
hard-working Senator, and he is doing what we in Oklahoma want him to 
do.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I yield the remainder of my time to the 
Senator from Oklahoma, Dr. Coburn.
  Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I will consume what time I may and then 
ask for the remaining time when I finish.
  The first thing I would like to say is I hold no ill will toward 
anybody who opposed me on this whatsoever. The Members here understand 
what their role is, and I understand what mine is. But I also 
understand that one of the things our country needs is citizen-based 
legislators. That is what I was in the House.
  During my time in the House of Representatives, nobody ever accused 
me of being anything other than the most hard-working there. I 
delivered 400 babies in 6 years while I was in the House. I never 
missed a vote during those times. I might have missed votes associated 
with the airlines or committee meetings, but I never missed a vote. I 
campaigned on the fact that I was going to be term limited. I am a 
term-limited Senator. The most I will be here is 12 years, and maybe 
not more than 6.
  But the point is: Why would I want to practice medicine? I want to 
practice medicine so I can be involved in what real people experience 
every day in this country. We don't get to see that enough. We don't 
get to see that at townhall meetings when we give speeches. But I will 
tell you that sitting in the middle of a patient's room when there is 
conflict in a family or death and dying or a new complication 
associated with an old disease and lives get impacted, I get to measure 
and I get to see what none of you get to see--what we do and how it 
affects people.
  I want to practice medicine to be the best Senator I can be. I want 
to maintain my skills so I can go back and deliver babies. There is 
nothing better in the world than delivering a baby. It is a 
reaffirmation of why we are all here. It is a reaffirmation of life.
  I will tell you that we need to think long and hard about our ethics 
rules. We have shot ourselves in the foot. Every Member in the Senate 
is ethical and wants the same thing for our country as I do--a bright 
and golden future, security and opportunity for our kids. But our 
ethics rules lack common sense.
  I will address one particular statement. This word is all about 
compensation. Arbitrarily, the decision was made by the Ethics 
Committee to define ``compensation'' as any compensation. I will read 
what 5 CFR 26236-303(b)6 of the U.S. Government Office of Ethics for 
the rest of the Government says.


[[Page 27026]]

       Compensation in this aspect is net compensation.

  This could have very well been solved by the Ethics Committee in a 
broad and consistent and commonsense interpretation of the word 
``compensation,'' but they chose not to do that. I don't know why. I am 
disappointed and hurt.
  I was not allowed to come before the Ethics Committee. I was not 
allowed to present my case. I was not allowed to discuss with any 
Ethics member my issue, to explain the basis of why I wanted to do it, 
and where I thought their interpretation was wrong. I had to secure 
legal counsel to have any communication with the Ethics Committee. I 
was notified by the Ethics Committee before I was ever sworn in that 
they had made this decision even though they lacked or asked for no 
input from me on my situation.
  If that is the pattern under which we operate the Ethics Committee, 
we have real problems. I don't blame that on the chairman of the Ethics 
Committee or the ranking member. It is a problem we see in lots of 
other areas of Government, that staff tend to drive things. People who 
do not have the ultimate responsibility take the ultimate 
responsibility.
  What I want to do is very simple: I want to be a great Senator. I 
want to contribute. I know I can contribute in ways that I would not be 
able to contribute by being a doctor and continuing the practice.
  The question of Senator Frist: Senator Frist has a wonderful 
arrangement. It is not available to me. He has a limited number of days 
that he has a malpractice firm, insurance firm, that will insure him. 
That is not available in the practice of obstetrics in Oklahoma. It is 
not available to me, period. If I could do that, I would practice just 
as Senator Frist. But I don't have that available to me, so I have 
expenses four to five times what Senator Frist would pay for the same 
type of insurance. Could I secure that, I would be happy to do it.
  The other thing we ought to talk about is the history of the Senate. 
We had reference to the rule change in 1977. There were no doctors in 
the Senate then. Senator Strom Thurmond's words, in adding physicians, 
was because he was trying to kill it. He was not trying to put 
physicians on there--and it backfired on him. That was his own rules. 
If you read his history of what happened in 1977, his attempt was to 
exclude many of us by adding doctors in the hopes that the Senate would 
turn that around.
  Some history on the Senate: There have been 37 doctors who have been 
in the Senate. Senator Frist and myself are the last two. Every doctor 
who was a practicing doctor who came to the Senate prior to Dr. Frist 
practiced, received payment and acted in an ethical fashion while they 
were here.
  It is not about money. It is about the ability to practice. I know 
not all Senators share my zeal for citizen-based legislators. There is 
a real difference. To the people of Oklahoma, when I campaigned, I made 
three promises to them: One, I would guarantee I would not be here for 
a long time; No. 2, I would continue to practice; and No. 3 is that I 
would work hard to solve the problems of the country before I tried to 
solve the problems of Oklahoma.
  I put the priorities out there. Oklahomans believe in that. Not 
necessarily all the editorial writers, not the talking heads, but the 
people who voted for me, every one of them knew I planned on continuing 
to practice medicine.
  It is also important to look at the confluence of the rules we have, 
the rules that say I could own a business and not directly direct it 
but indirectly direct it and have no limitation on my income whatever. 
I can farm, own a farm, collect government subsidies, with no limit 
whatever. I can write books. I can write music. I can counsel. I can 
advise. There is no limitation on us, except if you are a professional 
that has a fiduciary responsibility.
  The question ought to be what was behind the meaning of the rules. Do 
you think the intention was not to have a doctor practice medicine? 
That wasn't their intention. The fact that the malpractice crisis has 
created such a situation where you cannot practice for under $100,000 a 
year in terms of your expenses and overhead associated with that was 
never thought about in 1977.
  I understand there is going to be a motion, a point of order raised 
against this. I understand that. That is a high bar for any Member to 
change anything around here with 60 votes. I understand the feelings 
and the reasoning behind the Ethics Committee on why they want to do 
that. And I understand their motivation and their thinking. But I make 
one point to my Senate colleagues: There has not been one subcommittee 
that has had more subcommittee hearings than I have. As a matter of 
fact, there is not one subcommittee that has had half as many 
subcommittee hearings as I have. I have missed one vote in the entire 
year. I practice medicine on Saturdays, on the weekends, and from 6 to 
9 a.m. on Mondays. I catch my flight, and I am here for votes. My 
practicing of medicine does not interfere with my Senate duties. It 
enhances my Senate duties.
  If we don't change our rules, I will live with whatever the Senate 
says. I will figure out a way to practice medicine in some way that 
accords me to try to keep my skill and try to do that within the 
ethical guidelines of the Senate. But I believe we are discouraging 
anybody else who is a physician to run for the Senate, No. 1. No. 2, we 
discourage other professionals to run for the Senate. And it would be 
my hope that you would think about the long-term consequences of what 
we are doing. This does no damage to the Senate. In fact, it will 
enhance the Senate.
  I reserve the remainder of my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, is there time on this side?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Sixteen minutes.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I yield whatever time the Senator would appreciate 
having.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I haven't known Senator Coburn very long. I 
didn't know him when he served in the House. During his tenure in the 
Senate I found him to be a most gracious person. I like him.
  I had the good fortune of having served for many years on the Ethics 
Committee. I am sure there may have been a person or two in the past 
who served longer than I have, I just don't know, though, who they 
were. One of the most important responsibilities I have, and I think 
Senator Frist has, is putting people on the Ethics Committee. There are 
six Senators on the Ethics Committee, three Democrats and three 
Republicans. It ia a very difficult job. The ethics code is large and 
voluminous. They have an outstanding staff.
  Senator Voinovich and Senator Johnson are the two leaders of that 
committee and work with the other four members. Having been there, I 
want everyone here to know they spend hours and hours each week of 
their time. What do they do? They protect us. They handle complaints 
that come from the public. They handle complaints that come from other 
sources. Their job is very difficult.
  In the past few weeks--certainly, I will not disclose any names; I 
could not do that, it would be unethical to do so--they have resolved 
some very big cases in the Ethics Committee.
  These six Senators deserve our support. If we are going to overrule 
the Ethics Committee, we might just as well get rid of the Ethics 
Committee. That would be a terrible disaster for this institution.
  When I first came here from the House of Representatives I had a law 
practice at home. I went home and had the ability to practice law. I 
don't think that was good for the institution.
  We now make far more than our constituents make. We make $165,000 a 
year, or thereabouts. That is a lot of money. It is a full-time job to 
be a Member of the Senate, to be a Member of the U.S. House of 
Representatives.
  I know Senator Coburn is a nice man. I know he has a big heart. But 
he is going to have to, I believe, use that big heart and the medical 
skills he has in keeping with the rules of the Senate and not, in 
effect, thwart what the Ethics Committee has told us must happen.

[[Page 27027]]

  If this passes, it would tremendously undermine the work the Ethics 
Committee does. And speaking from experience, it is a very difficult, 
and quite frankly, a thankless job. The only thing you get from that is 
the knowledge that you are doing the right thing for the institution. 
It takes a tremendous amount of time. I repeat: Senators Johnson and 
Voinovich, every week we are back here, spend not a few minutes but 
hours of their time. No one knows what they do because it is secret. It 
is confidential.
  No matter how we feel about Senator Coburn, no matter what a 
gracious, nice, thoughtful, caring man he is, it would not be good for 
the Senate to follow what has been recommended in the form of this 
amendment that is now before this Senate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
  Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I take whatever time I might consume.
  The real difference for my colleagues to know is the definition of 
the word ``compensation.'' The same lawyer that is on the Senate Ethics 
Committee today worked for the Senate Ethics Committee in the House 
when the determination was made for the practice of medicine that 
compensation was net compensation.
  There is no damage done to the House or the institution of the House. 
As a matter of fact, because that rule was changed, there are now, I 
believe, 11 doctors in the House. I reject the idea that this would do 
damage to the Ethics Committee. This is a simple definition. It is one 
that the Ethics Committee could have chosen to use but chose not to. I 
don't know the motivation behind that. I know they could have solved 
the problem, and we wouldn't be where we are today.
  I reserve the remainder of my time.


                           Amendment No. 2647

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the pending 
amendment be set aside, and I send an amendment to the desk that has 
been cleared by both sides.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Iowa [Mr. Grassley] for himself and Mr. 
     Baucus proposes an amendment numbered 2647.

  Mr. GRASSLEY. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

              (Purpose: To provide a Manager's amendment)

       Beginning on page 63, line 18, strike all through page 64, 
     line 15, and insert the following:

     SEC. 212. EXTENSION AND INCREASE IN MINIMUM TAX RELIEF TO 
                   INDIVIDUALS.

       (a) In General.--Section 55(d)(1) is amended--
       (1) by striking ``$58,000'' and all that follows through 
     ``2005'' in subparagraph (A) and inserting ``$62,550 in the 
     case of taxable years beginning in 2006'', and
       (2) by striking ``$40,250'' and all that follows through 
     ``2005'' in subparagraph (B) and inserting ``$42,500 in the 
     case of taxable years beginning in 2006''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       Beginning on page 69, line 6, strike all through page 71, 
     line 13, and insert the following:
       (d) Expansion of Credit to Expenses of General 
     Collaborative Research Consortia.--Section 41 is amended--
       (1) by striking ``an energy research consortium'' in 
     subsections (a)(3) and (b)(3)(C)(i) and inserting ``a 
     research consortium'',
       (2) by striking ``energy'' each place it appears in 
     subsection (f)(6)(A),
       (3) by inserting ``or 501(c)(6)'' after ``section 
     501(c)(3)'' in subsection (f)(6)(A)(i)(I), and
       (4) by striking ``Energy research'' in the heading for 
     subsection (f)(6)(A) and inserting ``Research'' .
       Beginning on page 267, line 12, strike all through page 
     268, line 15, and insert the following:
       (b) Applicable Penalty.--For purposes of this section, the 
     term ``applicable penalty'' means any penalty, addition to 
     tax, or fine imposed under chapter 68 of the Internal Revenue 
     Code of 1986.
       (c) Effective Date.--The provisions of this section shall 
     apply to interest, penalties, additions to tax, and fines 
     with respect to any taxable year if, as of the date of the 
     enactment of this Act, the assessment of any tax, penalty, or 
     interest with respect to such taxable year is not prevented 
     by the operation of any law or rule of law.
       On page 310, between lines 10 and 11, insert the following:
       (b) Leases to Foreign Entities.--Section 849(b) of the 
     American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, as amended by subsection 
     (a), is amended by adding at the end the following new 
     paragraph:
       ``(3) Leases to foreign entities.--In the case of tax-
     exempt use property leased to a tax-exempt entity which is a 
     foreign person or entity, the amendments made by this part 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005, with respect to leases entered into on or before March 
     12, 2004.''.
       On page 310, line 11, strike ``(b)'' and insert ``(c)''.
       On page 320, in the table following line 17, strike 
     ``119.5'' and insert ``120''.
       On page 322, line 24, insert ``which has an average daily 
     worldwide production of crude oil of at least 500,000 barrels 
     for the taxable year and''

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this is an amendment sponsored by 
Senator Baucus and me. It remedies two matters in the bill. The most 
important one makes the amendment hold harmless, a pure hold-harmless 
amendment. The amendment also clarifies that Government contractors 
will receive the research and development credit. This amendment is 
fully offset.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, this is very important. It helps 
tremendously to improve some provisions in the underlying bill so no 
one else has to pay AMT; and, second, R&D provisions, enhanced R&D and 
contractors are not excluded. I support this.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2647) was agreed to.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.


                           Amendment No. 2633

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I think we are ready to wrap up debate on 
the pending amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
  Mr. VOINOVICH. Mr. President, I will clarify again for my colleagues 
the fact that the Ethics Committee genuinely tried to accommodate the 
concerns of the Senator from Oklahoma. We, as I say, worked hard to do 
it. But the fact is, the rule is clear on its face, and we are being 
asked to reinterpret what the Senate rules mean or to endorse a change 
in those rules for Senator Coburn.
  I think the specific language and legislative history of the rules 
and the Federal law prevent us from reinterpreting the rules. I 
believe, as I mentioned when I started my remarks earlier, this matter 
should not be here being debated on the floor of the Senate but, 
rather, as Senator Dodd suggested, Senator Coburn should go before the 
Rules Committee. And if Senator Ensign is unhappy that he cannot 
practice veterinary medicine, perhaps he should go before the Rules 
Committee and have a hearing and discuss this matter, and do it 
according to the procedures of the Senate.
  If this were to pass today, I think it would set a very dangerous 
precedent that would encourage people--rather than going through the 
process of the rules and procedures we have here in the Senate, it 
would cause them to come to the floor. I do not think that is good for 
the institution. I ask my colleagues to not support this resolution.
  Mr. President, at this time I raise a point of order that the Coburn 
amendment is not germane to the underlying bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
  Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections of that act for purposes of the pending amendment, and I ask 
for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is time remaining on the amendment.

[[Page 27028]]


  Mr. COBURN. I yield back all time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, a little bit out of order here, but under 
the previous order, Senator Santorum and Senator Byrd were to speak 
after the disposition of the pending amendment. At this point I have 
learned Senator Santorum and Senator Byrd wish to speak at a later 
point.
  I ask consent that the pending amendments be laid aside so Senator 
Feingold may offer his amendment, that is, after the disposition of 
this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Senator yield back the remainder of 
his time on the Coburn amendment?
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, if the manager of the bill will yield, 
procedurally, do we have any other amendments pending that votes need 
to----
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Time must be yielded back on the pending 
amendment, the Coburn amendment.
  Mr. REID. If, in fact, the time were yielded back, what would be the 
first vote in sequence?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. A sequence has not been established.
  Mr. REID. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, how much time have we locked in under the 
unanimous consent agreement that is now before the Senate as to time 
that has been allocated? Senator Feingold has 30 minutes; is that 
right?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  Mr. REID. Senator Santorum has 15 minutes; is that right?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  Mr. REID. Is there any other time allocated?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Senator Byrd for 30 minutes.
  Mr. REID. It is my understanding Senator Byrd has indicated he will 
not be giving his remarks.
  Mr. BAUCUS. That is correct.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, that leaves not a lot of time for others who 
want to come and debate their amendments. So if anyone wants to come 
and debate their amendments, I am not sure if Senator Feingold will use 
all of his time or if Senator Santorum will use all of his time.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Senator Sununu wants a couple minutes.
  Mr. REID. Senator Sununu wants a couple minutes.
  Mr. SUNUNU. Mr. President, if I may make a point through the Chair to 
the minority leader, I would seek 2 minutes to offer an amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. BAUCUS. Not now.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the first vote 
to occur in this long stack of amendments be in relation to the Coburn 
amendment, and that the two managers will determine the sequence of 
votes following that vote, and that Senator Bingaman be given 5 
minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. SUNUNU. Mr. President, I would ask unanimous consent to be added 
to that list for 2 minutes to offer an amendment at the end of that 
list.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Senator so modify his request?
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, it is after Senator Feingold's amendment? 
After that?
  Mr. SUNUNU. Yes.
  Mr. BAUCUS. OK, fine.
  Mr. REID. I accept the modification.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I might also say that means as to the list 
of Senators who come to me and say they want to speak on their 
amendments, I have said to them they could, but there will be a short 
period in which to speak, and they will have to come down here and 
speak some time before 7:30, if they want any time to speak.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, all time has expired on the 
Coburn amendment.
  Is there a point of order made?
  Mr. VOINOVICH. A point of order was made.
  Mr. COBURN. And a motion to waive, and I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, was the unanimous consent request approved?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Did the Senator indicate a time for the first 
vote?
  Mr. REID. Ten minutes.
  Mr. BAUCUS. The first vote would be at 7:30.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, 7:30. And all votes, the managers agree, 
should be 10-minute votes?
  Mr. BAUCUS. After the first vote.
  Mr. REID. After the first vote.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. REID. And that we use the standard rule around here with 2 
minutes equally divided on each amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that all pending 
amendments be set aside so that the Senator from Wisconsin can offer 
his amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. REID. So the unanimous consent request was approved?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. It was approved.
  The Senator from Wisconsin.


                           Amendment No. 2650

  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I send an amendment to the desk and ask 
for its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Wisconsin [Mr. Feingold], for himself, Mr. 
     Conrad, Mr. Chafee, Mr. Obama, and Mr. Salazar, proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2650.

  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of 
the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To fully reinstate the pay-as-you-go requirement through 
                                 2010)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

     SEC. __. PAY-AS-YOU-GO POINT OF ORDER IN THE SENATE.

       (a) Point of Order.--
       (1) In general.--It shall not be in order in the Senate to 
     consider any direct spending or revenue legislation that 
     would increase the on-budget deficit or cause an on-budget 
     deficit for any 1 of the 3 applicable time periods as 
     measured in paragraphs (5) and (6).
       (2) Applicable time periods.--For purposes of this 
     subsection, the term ``applicable time period'' means any 1 
     of the 3 following periods:
       (A) The first year covered by the most recently adopted 
     concurrent resolution on the budget.
       (B) The period of the first 5 fiscal years covered by the 
     most recently adopted concurrent resolution on the budget.
       (C) The period of the 5 fiscal years following the first 5 
     fiscal years covered in the most recently adopted concurrent 
     resolution on the budget.
       (3) Direct-spending legislation.--For purposes of this 
     subsection and except as provided in paragraph (4), the term 
     ``direct-spending legislation'' means any bill, joint 
     resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report that 
     affects direct spending as that term is defined by, and 
     interpreted for purposes of, the Balanced Budget and 
     Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
       (4) Exclusion.--For purposes of this subsection, the terms 
     ``direct-spending legislation'' and ``revenue legislation'' 
     do not include--
       (A) any concurrent resolution on the budget; or
       (B) any provision of legislation that affects the full 
     funding of, and continuation of, the deposit insurance 
     guarantee commitment in effect on the date of enactment of 
     the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990.
       (5) Baseline.--Estimates prepared pursuant to this section 
     shall--
       (A) use the baseline surplus or deficit used for the most 
     recently adopted concurrent resolution on the budget; and
       (B) be calculated under the requirements of subsections (b) 
     through (d) of section 257

[[Page 27029]]

     of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 
     1985 for fiscal years beyond those covered by that concurrent 
     resolution on the budget.
       (6) Prior surplus.--If direct spending or revenue 
     legislation increases the on-budget deficit or causes an on-
     budget deficit when taken individually, it must also increase 
     the on-budget deficit or cause an on-budget deficit when 
     taken together with all direct spending and revenue 
     legislation enacted since the beginning of the calendar year 
     not accounted for in the baseline under paragraph (5)(A), 
     except that direct spending or revenue effects resulting in 
     net deficit reduction enacted pursuant to reconciliation 
     instructions since the beginning of that same calendar year 
     shall not be available.
       (b) Waiver.--This section may be waived or suspended in the 
     Senate only by the affirmative vote of \3/5\ of the Members, 
     duly chosen and sworn.
       (c) Appeals.--Appeals in the Senate from the decisions of 
     the Chair relating to any provision of this section shall be 
     limited to 1 hour, to be equally divided between, and 
     controlled by, the appellant and the manager of the bill or 
     joint resolution, as the case may be. An affirmative vote of 
     \3/5\ of the Members of the Senate, duly chosen and sworn, 
     shall be required to sustain an appeal of the ruling of the 
     Chair on a point of order raised under this section.
       (d) Determination of Budget Levels.--For purposes of this 
     section, the levels of new budget authority, outlays, and 
     revenues for a fiscal year shall be determined on the basis 
     of estimates made by the Committee on the Budget of the 
     Senate.
       (e) Sunset.--This section shall expire on September 30, 
     2010.

  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I am pleased to bring an old friend back 
to this body--the pay-go rule. I am even more pleased to say this is 
not some new pay-go, but rather good old-fashioned ``Classic'' pay-go. 
This is the pay-go we used to have in the Senate--a rule that said you 
had to pay for what you wanted. If you want to increase entitlement 
spending, you have to pay for it. If you want to increase tax 
expenditures or cut tax rates, then you have to pay for it.
  In offering this amendment, I am pleased to be joined by the Senator 
from Rhode Island, Mr. Chafee, the Senator from Illinois, Mr. Obama, 
and in particular I am pleased to, of course, have the Senator from 
North Dakota, Mr. Conrad, as a cosponsor.
  As I said during the debate over the first part of the reconciliation 
scheme that was included in the budget resolution, there is no Senator 
more dedicated to a fiscally responsible Federal budget and to 
restoring sound budget rules than Senator Conrad. He is an acknowledged 
expert on the budget and the rules that govern its consideration, but 
as I also said during that debate, you do not have to be a Kent Conrad 
to understand the pay-go rule.
  It is a straightforward, commonsense requirement that whenever 
Congress wants to increase spending through entitlements or wants to 
reduce revenues from the Tax Code, then we have to pay for it or find 
60 votes to make an exception to the rule.
  I say to the Presiding Officer, as you well know--and I thank you for 
your help on this amendment--that rule was an effective restraint on 
the fiscal appetites of Congress and the White House, and it was 
critical to our ability to actually balance the Federal books. We 
balanced the Federal books during the 1990s using the pay-go rule.
  Of course, when this body stopped following that rule, the bottom 
dropped out from under the budget. We went from a projected 10-year 
unified budget surplus of $5 trillion to massive projected deficits and 
backbreaking debt.
  I marvel at how rapidly this institution loses its fiscal bearings. 
In 1992, thanks in great part to the remarkable campaign of Ross Perot, 
the budget deficit became the No. 1 domestic priority of the Nation. I 
ran on that issue in my 1992 campaign for the Senate. Perhaps a little 
naively, I offered a plan to balance the budget with over 82 specific 
proposals to cut wasteful programs in just about every area of 
Government.
  As optimistic as I was, I was surprised at how passionately many in 
the Senate actually embraced that cause. And because of a tough deficit 
reduction package in 1993 and a more modest package in 1997, we put the 
budget on track to be balanced. We actually balanced the Federal budget 
without using the Social Security surpluses. We actually started paying 
down the Federal debt, most of which had been run up during the 1980s.
  Central to our ability to get on the right fiscal track was this pay-
go rule. But all that work, all those tough decisions were squandered 
in the blink of a budgetary eye. The Federal budget is now in 
disastrous shape. Worse, we are on a track for even darker times. As Al 
Jolson famously said, ``You ain't seen nothin' yet.''
  As the Senator from North Dakota has tirelessly said: We are in the 
sweet spot right now. That means the retirement of my generation, the 
baby boom generation, is around the corner. And with it, we will 
witness enormous new demands on the budget. If we can't get our act 
together now, there is little hope that we can face those demands 
responsibly.
  We have to stop running deficits. Running deficits caused the 
Government to use the surpluses of the Social Security trust fund for 
other Government purposes rather than to pay down the debt and help our 
Nation prepare for the coming retirement of the baby boom generation. 
As Senator Conrad has noted, it isn't just the annual budget deficits 
that are the problem, it is our debt as well. Every dollar that we add 
to the Federal debt is another dollar that we are forcing our children 
to pay back in higher taxes for fewer Government benefits.
  As I have noted before during previous pay-go debates, when the 
Government in this generation, in our generation, chooses to spend on 
current consumption and to accumulate debt for our children's 
generation to pay, it does nothing less than rob our children of their 
own choices. We make our choices to spend on our wants, but we saddle 
them with debts that they must pay from their tax dollars and their 
hard work. That is not right.
  That is why this amendment is so critical. We absolutely must 
reinstate the pay-go rule. We need a strong budget process. We need to 
exert fiscal discipline. When the pay-go rule was in effect, that tough 
fiscal discipline actually governed the budget process. Under the 
current approach, it is the other way around. The annual budget 
resolution actually determines how much fiscal discipline we are 
willing to impose on ourselves. That simply has not worked, and it 
won't work. When Congress decides that it would be nice to create a new 
entitlement or enact new tax cuts and then adjust its budget rules to 
permit those policies, we are inviting a disastrous result. That is 
exactly what has happened.
  This amendment is simple and straightforward. It would simply return 
us to the rule under which Congress operated for the decade of the 
1990s. It was instrumental in balancing the Federal budget. Many of us 
lived under that rule, and we know how effective it was.
  A real pay-go rule by itself would not eliminate annual budget 
deficits and balance the budget, but we will never get there without a 
real pay-go rule.
  I urge my colleagues to support this commonsense, time-tested 
amendment.
  I reserve the remainder of my time and yield the floor.


                           Amendment No. 2651

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Mr. SUNUNU. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment be set aside, and I send an amendment to the desk and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The clerk 
will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. Sununu] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2651.

  Mr. SUNUNU. I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To repeal State and local taxation exemptions applicable to 
  the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Loan 
                         Mortgage Corporation)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

[[Page 27030]]



     SEC. __. REPEAL OF STATE AND LOCAL TAX EXEMPTION FOR FANNIE 
                   MAE AND FREDDIE MAC.

       (a) Fannie Mae.--Section 309(c) of the Federal National 
     Mortgage Association Charter Act (12 U.S.C. 1723a(c)) is 
     amended to read as follows:
       ``(c) [Repealed.]''.
       (b) Freddie Mac.--Section 303(e) of the Federal Home Loan 
     Mortgage Corporation Act (12 U.S.C. 1452(e)) is amended to 
     read as follows:
       ``(e) [Repealed.]''.

  Mr. SUNUNU. Mr. President, I offer an amendment today that deals with 
what I consider to be a tax loophole that is in the Code that fully 
exempts private, for-profit corporations, owned by shareholders that 
have had very high levels of profit in recent years, from paying any 
State or local taxes. The entities I am talking about are the 
Government-sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These are 
chartered by the Federal Government. We give them a number of benefits. 
They help with the secondary mortgage market and have been very 
successful in that mission. But they are in fact private, for-profit 
corporations with very large profits, and they do not need to be exempt 
from paying State and local taxes. In fact, I think if they are really 
committed to the local communities and the homeowners they serve across 
the country, they ought to be happy to pay State and local taxes.
  We have heard a lot of debate over the last several hours about Big 
Oil. We have even had some amendments that take away tax benefits from 
oil companies. Some of those amendments I have supported. There have 
been other amendments that actually impose special taxes on oil 
companies. Given the concern people seem to have with high levels of 
profits at oil firms in recent months, I think people should embrace 
the idea of getting rid of this tax loophole, imposing the same kind of 
legitimate State and local taxes on the GSEs as we see anywhere else.
  It might be one thing if the levels of profit at these entities had 
been plowed back into the community. But that isn't the case. The 
lion's share of these profits have gone to shareholders or in some 
cases to exorbitant executive pay--$5 million for some of the 
executives at these corporations, $10 million a year in one case. 
Clearly, these profits are being used to put back into homeownership. 
These are companies that can afford to pay State and local taxes. They 
ought to pay State and local taxes.
  I certainly encourage my colleagues to support the amendment.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendments be set aside so that the Senator from New York may offer an 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2624

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, before I offer my amendment, I ask 
unanimous consent that Senators Warner, Santorum, and Coleman be added 
as cosponsors of amendment No. 2624, the Leahy amendment, of which I am 
a lead cosponsor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2635

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2635.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New York [Mr. Schumer] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2635.

  Mr. SCHUMER. I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

   (Purpose: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to impose a 
 temporary windfall profit tax on crude oil and to use the proceeds of 
  the tax collected to provide a nonrefundable tax credit of $100 for 
 every personal exemption claimed for taxable years beginning in 2005)

       At the end of title IV add the following:

     SEC. 410. TEMPORARY WINDFALL PROFITS TAX.

       (a) In General.--Subtitle E (relating to alcohol, tobacco, 
     and certain other excise taxes) is amended by adding at the 
     end thereof the following new chapter:

         ``CHAPTER 56--TEMPORARY WINDFALL PROFITS ON CRUDE OIL

``Sec. 5896. Imposition of tax.
``Sec. 5897. Windfall profit; etc.
``Sec. 5898. Special rules and definitions.

     ``SEC. 5896. IMPOSITION OF TAX.

       ``(a) In General.--In addition to any other tax imposed 
     under this title, there is hereby imposed on any applicable 
     taxpayer an excise tax in an amount equal to 50 percent of 
     the windfall profit of such taxpayer for any taxable year 
     beginning in 2005.
       ``(b) Applicable Taxpayer.--For purposes of this chapter, 
     the term `applicable taxpayer' means, with respect to 
     operations in the United States--
       ``(1) any integrated oil company (as defined in section 
     291(b)(4)), and
       ``(2) any other producer or refiner of crude oil with gross 
     receipts from the sale of such crude oil or refined oil 
     products for the taxable year exceeding $100,000,000.

     ``SEC. 5897. WINDFALL PROFIT; ETC.

       ``(a) General Rule.--For purposes of this chapter, the term 
     `windfall profit' means the excess of the adjusted taxable 
     income of the applicable taxpayer for the taxable year over 
     the reasonably inflated average profit for such taxable year.
       ``(b) Adjusted Taxable Income.--For purposes of this 
     chapter, with respect to any applicable taxpayer, the 
     adjusted taxable income for any taxable year is equal to the 
     taxable income for such taxable year (within the meaning of 
     section 63 and determined without regard to this 
     subsection)--
       ``(1) increased by any interest expense deduction, 
     charitable contribution deduction, and any net operating loss 
     deduction carried forward from any prior taxable year, and
       ``(2) reduced by any interest income, dividend income, and 
     net operating losses to the extent such losses exceed taxable 
     income for the taxable year.
     In the case of any applicable taxpayer which is a foreign 
     corporation, the adjusted taxable income shall be determined 
     with respect to such income which is effectively connected 
     with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States.
       ``(c) Reasonably Inflated Average Profit.--For purposes of 
     this chapter, with respect to any applicable taxpayer, the 
     reasonably inflated average profit for any taxable year is an 
     amount equal to the average of the adjusted taxable income of 
     such taxpayer for taxable years beginning during the 2002-
     2004 taxable year period plus 10 percent of such average.

     ``SEC. 5898. SPECIAL RULES AND DEFINITIONS.

       ``(a) Withholding and Deposit of Tax.--The Secretary shall 
     provide such rules as are necessary for the withholding and 
     deposit of the tax imposed under section 5896.
       ``(b) Records and Information.--Each taxpayer liable for 
     tax under section 5896 shall keep such records, make such 
     returns, and furnish such information as the Secretary may by 
     regulations prescribe.
       ``(c) Return of Windfall Profit Tax.--The Secretary shall 
     provide for the filing and the time of such filing of the 
     return of the tax imposed under section 5896.
       ``(d) Crude Oil.--The term `crude oil' includes crude oil 
     condensates and natural gasoline.
       ``(e) Businesses Under Common Control.--For purposes of 
     this chapter, all members of the same controlled group of 
     corporations (within the meaning of section 267(f)) and all 
     persons under common control (within the meaning of section 
     52(b) but determined by treating an interest of more than 50 
     percent as a controlling interest) shall be treated as 1 
     person.
       ``(f) Regulations.--The Secretary shall prescribe such 
     regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out 
     the purposes of this chapter.''.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of chapters for subtitle 
     E of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding 
     at the end the following new item:

        ``Chapter 56. Temporary Windfall Profit on Crude Oil.''.

       (c) Deductibility of Windfall Profit Tax.--The first 
     sentence of section 164(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 
     1986 (relating to deduction for taxes) is amended by 
     inserting after paragraph (5) the following new paragraph:
       ``(6) The windfall profit tax imposed by section 5896.''.
       (d) Nonrefundable Credit.--In the case of taxable years 
     beginning in 2005, for purposes of the Internal Revenue Code 
     of 1986, the tax liability of each taxpayer otherwise 
     determined under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 shall be 
     reduced by $100 for each personal exemption (within the 
     meaning of section 151 of such Code) claimed by such taxpayer 
     for such taxable year.
       (e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning in 2005.

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I rise to offer this amendment which will 
help balance the oil markets and help families balance their budgets 
this winter by pulling some of the money out of the gas pumps and 
putting it back in people's pockets. It would do so by instituting a 
windfall profit levy on the oil companies and transferring those 
proceeds back to where they came from, the consumer.
  I am going to not use all the rhetoric. We have talked about a 
windfall

[[Page 27031]]

levy before. But this one is considerably different than the one that 
was offered before in a number of ways. I would like to outline those 
ways.
  First, the revenues go directly to the individual's pockets. It does 
not go through the Government. It does not go through any agency. It 
simply adds a tax credit of $100 for every person. That means the money 
goes to everyone. Big families will get more than small families, and 
it will certainly help taxpayers at the lower end.
  The temporary levy we are talking about is also different. The 
previous one just taxed oil when it was above $40 a barrel. My worry 
about that is that it could raise the price at the pump. What we are 
doing is using a method that puts this levy on profits. It means that 
that happens after the companies have brought in their cash and, 
therefore, is quite different than an amendment that just goes on to 
taxes.
  Let me describe the amendment. We create a temporary levy on the 
excess profits of U.S. oil companies and foreign companies that do 
substantial business in the United States, in order to provide every 
taxpayer with a nonrefundable tax credit of $100 for 2005 for every 
person in their household. The temporary levy applies to major 
integrated oil companies, plus any refiners or producers with more than 
$100 million in sales. The revenue mechanism is an actual tax on 
windfall profits in 2005 that exceed a 3-year historic average. It will 
be very easy for the companies to calculate this based on the numbers 
they have previously reported on their tax returns. So no one can argue 
it is administratively difficult.
  The proposal is intended to be a complement to the other windfall 
proposals. It is different. For those who argue against the other 
proposals on grounds that such levees will increase production costs 
and thereby fuel costs, this amendment addresses those concerns because 
it is an actual tax on profits, not production. In other words, those 
who say they object to windfall profit levees on these grounds will 
have to show their real colors. Those who don't want to force the oil 
companies to give up anything under any circumstances will, of course, 
not vote for this amendment. But for those who have come to the floor 
to argue against other proposals simply because they say they will 
increase production costs, this amendment would not. You should vote 
for it.
  As I mentioned, the revenue goes to provide every U.S. taxpayer with 
a nonrefundable tax credit of $100. The amendment is designed to be 
revenue neutral. The excess profit tax rate will be adjusted, as 
necessary, to ensure there will be no net budget impact that violates 
the reconciliation instructions.
  Bottom line: different than the other proposal; money goes directly 
to the taxpayer; money is levied on profits so it doesn't raise costs 
or interfere with production because it is after the line.
  I ask for the yeas and nays on the amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I see Senator Santorum. Under previous 
order, he has the right to speak for 15 minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.
  Mr. SANTORUM. Mr. President, I first want to start out by thanking 
the chairman for all the hard work he has put in on this package. The 
work we have done together has been at times a challenging process, but 
I certainly appreciate working together, particularly on a section of 
the bill which I will talk about more in detail and that has not been 
talked about on the floor, and that is the section of the bill dealing 
with charitable giving, part of an effort that I have been working on, 
and many have been working on, to try to help those in need in our 
society by helping those important mediating institutions of our 
society who are out there every day on the frontlines serving the needs 
of those who, in many cases, are left behind by society.
  I am pleased overall that we are going to be able to pass this 
package, hopefully soon, that will stop tax increases from going into 
effect. I call this bill the ``Tax Increase Prevention Act'' because 
but for this bill, hundreds of thousands of taxpayers in my State alone 
and millions across America would have their taxes go up starting in 
January of next year.
  In Pennsylvania, almost 350,000 families would see their taxes go up, 
some dramatically, because of the alternative minimum tax.
  Mr. President, 268,000 taxpayers will benefit from the low-income 
savers credit, which would go away but for this bill; 150,000 families 
and students would continue to be able to deduct college tuition, 
another important provision in this bill, and 142,000 teachers in 
Pennsylvania will be able to deduct expenses that they have in the 
classroom helping their students.
  One of the most important things about this tax bill is that it will 
in fact provide more certainty for Americans in providing a Tax Code 
and will continue the policies that have created the economic growth 
and the vitality that this economy has had after some of the tough 
blows that were dealt in the early part of this century.
  But the focus I wanted to talk about on this bill tonight are some 
things that I have been working on along in particular on the other 
side of the aisle with Senator Joe Lieberman. It has been a long road 
for us on what is called the CARE Act, Charitable Aid and Recovery 
Empowerment Act. It is an important piece of legislation that does a 
lot to incentivize people across America to give.
  There are several provisions in the bill I want to highlight that are 
vitally important in encouraging charitable giving. If we look at that 
in America, what we see is not necessarily a rosy story. Yes, we have 
seen increases in giving around events such as Katrina and the events 
of 9/11, but what we have seen after the publicity and after all the 
attention attracted by those disasters and those horrific instances, 
actually charitable giving pretty much flat over the past 25 years.
  About 25 or 30 years ago we gave almost 2.5 percent of GDP in 
charitable giving--2.5 percent we were generous enough to give to 
charitable organizations to help those in need in our society. Today, 
we are at around 1 percent. That is something that, candidly, I think 
we need to work on. There are a lot of reasons why that may happen. 
Some of it may be we have seen an increase in Government over the last 
25 or 30 years and, as a result, we have seen some squeezing out of 
some of the charitable organizations that existed in the past. But the 
bottom line is that America is strong when our civic and community 
organizations are strong, and they can only be strong if they have the 
resources to be out there in the community to meet the needs that are 
so prevalent.
  We have done a couple things in this bill that are important. One 
that I am very proud of is that we have taken the opportunity, for the 
first time in a long time in the Tax Code, to give nonitemizers the 
opportunity to deduct charitable contributions. Heretofore, if you were 
one of the two-thirds of Americans who filled out a tax form, using the 
short form, and you could give 10 percent of your income--and in fact 
many in our society do tithe, give 10 percent of their income--but if 
you are a low-income person and you do not have any other reason to 
take other than the standard deduction, you would be denied the 
opportunity to take those deductions and get some support for your 
supporting of charitable organizations.
  Under this bill, you will now be able to have an opportunity, on the 
front of the 1040 form, to deduct your charitable contributions similar 
to those who itemize the deduction.
  That is an important incentive because there is a floor on this. For 
a couple filing jointly, you would have to contribute $420, and that 
might be changed. We are working on an amendment to maybe lower that 
floor a little bit. But it will be around $400 before you can claim a 
deduction on your tax form.
  So the charities we have talked to, everybody from the United Way to 
the Salvation Army and others, they are

[[Page 27032]]

very excited because they do believe this will incentivize more 
generous giving instead of giving the deduction for giving that would 
otherwise have occurred without this incentive. So we think it 
incentivizes more generous giving both for those who do not itemize, as 
well as, if we also put a floor on itemizers, we will incentivize 
itemizers to give more and be more generous through this.
  A couple other aspects we have worked on. One is an IRA rollover 
provision. We have literally billions of dollars stored up in IRAs with 
some people who candidly have done well enough that they don't need the 
IRAs to maintain the quality of life they have. But that money is 
locked up for folks who want to contribute that IRA to charitable 
organizations. It has been estimated that literally $2 to $3 billion of 
charitable contributions could occur if we stop what is current law, 
which is the penalties and interest that would be charged to those who 
would donate their IRAs to philanthropic organizations. So we remove 
penalties and interest which I think will unlock literally billions of 
dollars in money for, particularly in this case, educational 
institutions, which I think would do more than others to receive these 
kinds of funds.
  We have a food donation provision. According to America's Second 
Harvest, this provision which focuses on farmers and ranchers and 
restaurateurs, this provision, I am told by America's Second Harvest, 
will encourage up to $2 billion over the next 10 years in donations of 
food and will feed 878 million people with meals. This is a very 
important provision as we try to attack hunger in America.
  We have a provision that the Senator from Montana has been involved 
in with respect to book donations, which is important to again help 
educational institutions, libraries, and others.
  So there are a variety of different provisions in this bill which are 
essential for us who want to see our fellow man reach into their 
pockets and to reach out their hands to help those in need in our 
society but need more wherewithal to do so.
  This package of bills we have put together in this legislation will 
help charities do just that.
  Now, on the other side of the coin, as many of the charities have 
been following this debate, there was a concern, candidly, about some 
``charitable reforms'' that have been the subject of a lot of 
conversation in the philanthropic world that I have been working on 
with the chairman, to try to address some of the abuses that the 
Finance Committee, through several hearings that the chairman has had, 
that have been documented about some charitable organizations using 
money for, in some cases, personal gain or for transferring money to 
members of their family. Some of these concerns are legitimate, but one 
of the things that I was adamant about is that we did not want to have 
a series of reforms in place that were going to jeopardize the vast 
majority of nonprofit organizations that do incredibly good work, most 
of them volunteers, most of them with very little staff, certainly very 
little paid staff, and are the heart and soul of so many communities 
across America. So it has been a balancing act for the Chairman and 
myself as we have worked through this. We didn't quite get it right, in 
my opinion, in the committee mark, although the chairman went a long 
way in scaling back some of the more ambitious changes that he had 
proposed, but we have worked together, and from the mark to the 
amendment that will be offered by the chairman later, I think we have 
accomplished about 90 percent of the concerns and certainly the major 
concerns that not only I have had but those charitable organizations, 
particularly the small charitable organizations that are concerned 
about, if you will, more of a Sarbanes-Oxley approach to dealing with 
some charitable organizations that would have made it almost impossible 
for these charities to continue to function, particularly in smalltown 
America.
  We have now been able to come up with compromises that I think will, 
at least according to all of the feedback we have been getting--and I 
want to congratulate Melanie Looney in my office. She has done an 
outstanding job in making sure that the interests of the mom-and-pop 
charities, if you will, across America have been represented here and 
that we are not doing anything while, on the one hand, giving 
incentives for people to contribute to charitable organizations and, on 
the other hand, shutting these charitable organizations down because 
they can't survive under the burden of new regulations they would be 
placed under.
  I think we have done a great job in balancing those interests. There 
are still a couple of things we would like to adjust, but there is 
always conference and the ability to work together with the House to 
get that done.
  I thank the chairman. We have been discussing this and working on 
this and, in some respects, battling on this for quite some time, but I 
believe now that we have reached the point where we have some 
responsible and proper reforms that the vast majority of the charitable 
world embraces and understands they need to increase the 
professionalization in a lot of respects. That has been accomplished as 
a result of the reforms that we have put forward today. I look forward 
to working with the Chairman and ranking member and members of the Ways 
and Means Committee to get a bill that all in the charitable community 
can embrace that is responsible in improving governance, as well as a 
great incentive for these organizations to go out and meet the needs 
that are so pressing our communities across America.
  With that, Mr. President, I thank the chairman and ranking member for 
his time.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment temporarily be laid aside so I can offer an amendment on 
behalf of the Democratic leader, Senator Reid.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2653

  Mr. BAUCUS. I send an amendment to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will please report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Montana [Mr. Baucus], for Mr. Reid, for 
     himself, Mr. Kerry, Mr. Lautenberg, Ms. Snowe, Mr. Salazar, 
     Mr. Bingaman, Mr. Jeffords, Mr. Bayh, Mrs. Clinton, Mr. 
     Harkin, and Mrs. Feinstein, proposes an amendment numbered 
     2653.

  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend through 
2010 certain tax incentives for renewable energy production and energy 
                    efficient building construction)

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

 Subtitle B--Extending Tax Incentives for Renewable Energy Production 
                   and Energy Efficient Construction

     SEC. 411. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCTION CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), and (9) of 
     section 45(d) (relating to qualified facilities) are amended 
     by striking ``2008'' each place it appears and inserting 
     ``2011''.

     SEC. 412. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (2)(A)(i)(II) and (3)(A)(ii) (relating to energy 
     credit) is amended by striking ``2008'' both places it 
     appears and inserting ``2011''.

     SEC. 413. EXTENSION OF CLEAN RENEWABLE ENERGY BONDS THROUGH 
                   2010.

       Section 54(m) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 414. EXTENSION OF ENERGY EFFICIENT COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS 
                   DEDUCTION THROUGH 2010.

       Section 179D(h) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 415. EXTENSION OF NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 45L(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 416. EXTENSION OF RESIDENTIAL RENEWABLE ENERGY EFFICIENT 
                   PROPERTY CREDIT THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25D(g) is amended to read as follows:
       ``(a) Termination.--The credit allowed under this section 
     shall not apply to--
       ``(1) property described in paragraph (1) or (2) of 
     subsection (d) placed in service after December 31, 2010, and

[[Page 27033]]

       ``(2) property described in subsection (d)(3) placed in 
     service after December 31, 2007.''.

     SEC. 417. EXTENSION OF NONBUSINESS ENERGY PROPERTY CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25C(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 418. MODIFICATIONS OF EFFECTIVE DATES OF LEASING 
                   PROVISIONS OF THE AMERICAN JOBS CREATION ACT OF 
                   2004.

       (a) In General.--Section 849(b) of the American Jobs 
     Creation Act of 2004 is amended by adding at the end the 
     following new paragraph:
       ``(5) Leases to foreign entities.--In the case of tax-
     exempt use property leased to a tax-exempt entity which is a 
     foreign person or entity, the amendments made by this part 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2004, with respect to leases entered into on or before March 
     12, 2004.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall take effect as if included in the enactment of the 
     American Jobs Creation Act of 2004.

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment be laid aside so that Senator Nelson of Florida may offer an 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2601

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, I call up amendment 2601.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will please report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Florida [Mr. Nelson], for himself, Mr. 
     Dorgan, Mr. Leahy, Mr. Schumer, and Mr. Dayton, proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2601.

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that 
reading of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to provide 
extended and additional protection to Medicare beneficiaries who enroll 
        for the Medicare prescription drug benefit during 2006)

       At the end of title IV, insert the following:

     SEC. ___. PROTECTION FOR MEDICARE BENEFICIARIES WHO ENROLL IN 
                   THE PRESCRIPTION DRUG BENEFIT DURING 2006.

       (a) Extended Period of Open Enrollment During All of 2006 
     Without Late Enrollment Penalty.--Section 1851(e)(3)(B) of 
     the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395w-21(e)(3)(B)) is 
     amended--
       (1) in clause (iii), by striking ``May 15, 2006'' and 
     inserting ``December 31, 2006''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following new sentence:
       ``An individual making an election during the period 
     beginning on November 15, 2006, and ending on December 15, 
     2006, shall specify whether the election is to be effective 
     with respect to 2006 or with respect to 2007 (or both).''
       (b) One-Time Challenge of Plan Enrollment for Medicare 
     Prescription Drug Benefit During All of 2006.--
       (1) In general.--Section 1851(e) of the Social Security Act 
     (42 U.S.C. 1395w-21(e)) is amended--
       (A) in paragraph (2)(B)--
       (i) in the heading, by striking ``for first 6 months'';
       (ii) in clause (i)--
       (I) by striking ``the first 6 months of 2006'' and 
     inserting ``2006''; and
       (II) by striking ``the first 6 months during 2006'' and 
     inserting ``2006''; and
       (iii) in clause (ii), by inserting ``(other than during 
     2006)'' after ``paragraph (3)''; and
       (B) in paragraph (4), by striking ``2006'' and inserting 
     ``2007'' each place it appears.
       (2) Confirming amendment.--Section 1860D-1(b)(1)(B)(iii) of 
     the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395w-101(b)(1)(B)(iii) is 
     amended by striking ``subparagraphs (B) and (C) of paragraph 
     (2)'' and inserting ``paragraph (2)(C)''.
       (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall take effect as if included in the enactment of the 
     Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvment, and Modernization Act 
     of 2003 (Public Law 108-173).

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, I am offering an amendment to 
try to help our senior citizens from the state of confusion that many 
of them are now experiencing since the prescription drug benefit 
started 2 days ago and being signed up. If other Senators are hearing 
from their senior citizens as I am--and I met with a group on Monday in 
West Palm Beach--they will find that many of them are confused, 
bewildered, and in some cases even frightened because they are afraid 
of making a choice and then making a mistake, and under the current 
law--and we need to clean up some of this current law anyway--they 
could not rectify that mistake for a whole year. And now in trying to 
make an intelligent decision on something that is as important to a 
senior citizen as prescription drugs, they are being confronted with a 
multiplicity of plans.
  I had one senior in West Palm Beach tell me they were actually 
looking at 103 plans. In other parts of the State, you are looking at 
18 companies offering 43 stand-alone prescription plans and, in 
addition, another 37 companies will offer a total of 257 different 
Medicare Advantage prescription drug plans. And each of these has 
differing premiums, cost-sharing requirements, different drugs, and 
pharmacy access.
  What about the senior citizen who has one or two pharmacies in their 
small community and then they have to worry about finding the plan that 
fits with that pharmacy? Or what about the senior citizen who has a 
prescription and depends on it, goes and finds the plan that covers 
that prescription and then what happens if the doctor in the course of 
the year changes that prescription and then that prescription is not 
contained on that particular plan's formula?
  Sorting through these plans is complicated and time-consuming, and 
that is what has led our seniors to be confused, in some cases 
bewildered, and, very sadly in cases that I saw, even frightened.
  We can rectify that with this amendment. All it does is give them 
more time instead of the deadline coming down like an ax in the night 
next May. It extends that deadline for 6 months, and it allows them, if 
they make a choice within the course of that year, 2006, the first year 
that the prescription drug law takes effect for Medicare, if they make 
a mistake, to rectify it. And if they make a choice to go with the 
Medicare prescription drug benefit and then realize they want to go 
back with their former employer's prescription drug plan, they have 
that option.
  That is the essence of this amendment. Mr. President, I ask for the 
yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Allen). Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendments be set aside so that Senator Bingaman from New Mexico may 
offer an amendment. I ask him to limit his remarks to a couple minutes. 
I yield him 3 minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2642

   (Purpose: To provide for a tax credit for offering employer-based 
                      health insurance coverage.)

  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, I call up for consideration amendment 
No. 2642.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Mexico [Mr. Bingaman], for himself, 
     and Mr. Kerry, proposes an amendment numbered 2642.

  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading 
of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')
  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, this amendment I am offering is to 
create a tax credit for small businesses so they can provide health 
insurance for their employees. This is a terrible need, an enormous 
need in my own State of New Mexico.
  I am defining small businesses as businesses with 50 or fewer 
employees. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, only 43 percent 
of small businesses defined in this way offer health insurance to their 
employees. This chart sets out the range that applies to each State, 
and you can see that many States have this very same problem.
  In my home State of New Mexico, roughly 38 percent of workers who 
work for small businesses have access to employer-provided health 
insurance. In a State such as New Mexico where a majority of the 
businesses have fewer than 50 employees, the lack of employer-provided 
insurance is reflected

[[Page 27034]]

in the overall number of uninsured New Mexicans. Yet according to the 
Kaiser Foundation, 80 percent of the uninsured in our country come from 
a family in which at least one person is working.
  This amendment creates a tax credit that ranges from 30 percent to 50 
percent of the cost of qualified health insurance expenses with smaller 
employers getting the largest credit. In order to keep the costs down, 
I have provided that this credit will be effective in the 2006 tax 
year. We will have to take additional action to extend it beyond that.
  What we have learned over the years is that employer-provided 
benefits are the most efficient and effective means to deliver health 
care coverage and retirement benefits.
  This amendment is totally offset by requiring Government contractors 
to withhold a very small amount of the taxes they will ultimately have 
to pay.
  This is a very meritorious amendment. It is totally offset and paid 
for. I urge my colleagues to support it, and the small businesses in 
their States will be very appreciative of that support.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendments be set aside so that the Senator from Illinois, Mr. Durbin, 
may offer an amendment. I ask him, too, to limit his remarks to 3 
minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The 
Senator from Illinois.


                           Amendment No. 2623

   (Purpose: To reduce the tax on patriotic employers, and for other 
                               purposes)

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2623.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Illinois [Mr. Durbin] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2623.

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading 
of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, our Tax Code does two things. It raises 
revenue, but it also tries to encourage good behavior and discourage 
bad behavior. What this amendment does is reward good behavior on the 
part of American businesses. It is my belief that if a business does 
the right thing for its employees and for this country, it should have 
a tax benefit, and that is why we are designating patriotic employers.
  Who are these employers? They are employers who maintain or increase 
the number of full-time workers in America relative to the number of 
full-time workers outside of America. They maintain their corporate 
headquarters in America if the company has ever been headquartered 
here. They pay decent wages to their employees, a livable wage of at 
least $7.75 an hour. They provide a retirement plan for their 
employees, either a defined benefit or defined contribution that 
matches at least 5 percent of their worker contributions for every 
employer. They pay at least 60 percent of workers' health care 
premiums, and when their workers are members of the Guard and Reserve 
and activated to serve overseas, they make up the difference in salary 
so their families can have peace of mind financially while their 
soldiers are off fighting.
  I believe the companies who do this deserve a benefit. They deserve a 
reward. If you are not providing for your employees a decent wage, if 
you are sending all your jobs overseas, if you don't have a retirement 
plan, and you don't provide health insurance, why in the world should 
we reward that?
  Let's pick those good, patriotic American companies and give them 
this tax credit, which is fully offset by this amendment.
  Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendments be set aside so that the Senator from Nebraska, Mr. Nelson, 
may offer an amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask the Senator if he can limit his 
remarks to 3 minutes, too.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nebraska.


                           Amendment No. 2625

  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, I thank my colleague from 
Montana for this opportunity. I call up my amendment No. 2625, which is 
at the desk, and ask for its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Nebraska [Mr. Nelson], for himself, and 
     Mr. DeWine, proposes an amendment numbered 2625.

  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that 
the reading of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

   (Purpose: To require the Secretary of the Treasury to establish a 
 disability preference program for qualified tax collection contracts)

       At the end of title IV, insert the following:

     SEC. __. DISABILITY PREFERENCE PROGRAM FOR TAX COLLECTION 
                   CONTRACTS.

       (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Treasury shall not 
     enter into any qualified tax collection contract after April 
     1, 2006, until the Secretary implements a disability 
     preference program that meets the requirements of subsection 
     (b).
       (b) Disability Preference Program Requirements.--
       (1) In general.--A disability preference program meets the 
     requirements of this subsection if such program requires that 
     not less than 10 percent of the accounts of each dollar value 
     category are awarded to persons described in paragraph (2).
       (2) Person described.--For purposes of paragraph (1), a 
     person is described in this paragraph if--
       (A) as of the date any qualified tax collection contract is 
     awarded--
       (i) such person employs not less than 50 severely disabled 
     individuals within the United States; or
       (ii) not less than 30 percent of the employees of such 
     person within the United States are severely disabled 
     individuals;
       (B) such person agrees as a condition of the qualified tax 
     collection contract that not more than 90 days after the date 
     such contract is awarded, not less than 35 percent of the 
     employees of such person employed in connection with 
     providing services under such contract shall--
       (i) be hired after the date such contract is awarded; and
       (ii) be severely disabled individuals; and
       (C) such person is otherwise qualified to perform the 
     services required.
       (c) Definitions.--For purposes of this section--
       (1) Qualified tax collection contract.--The term 
     ``qualified tax collection contract'' shall have the meaning 
     given such term under section 6306(b) of the Internal Revenue 
     Code of 1986.
       (2) Dollar value category.--The term ``dollar value 
     category'' means the dollar ranges of accounts for collection 
     as determined and assigned by the Secretary under section 
     6306(b)(1)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 with 
     respect to a qualified tax collection contract.
       (3) Severely disabled individual.--The term ``severely 
     disabled individual'' means--
       (A) a veteran of the United States armed forces with a 
     disability of 50 percent or greater--
       (i) determined by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to be 
     service-connected; or
       (ii) deemed by law to be service-connected; or
       (B) any individual who is a disabled beneficiary (as 
     defined in section 1148(k)(2) of the Social Security Act (42 
     U.S.C. 1320b-19(k)(2))) or who would be considered to be such 
     a disabled beneficiary but for having income or resources in 
     excess of the income or resources eligibility limits 
     established under title XVI of the Social Security Act (42 
     U.S.C. 1381 et seq.), respectively.

  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that 
Senator Collins be added as an original cosponsor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, I call up my amendment at the

[[Page 27035]]

desk and ask for its immediate consideration.
  In October 2004, Congress enacted the American Jobs Creation Act of 
2004, Public Law 108-357, providing for outsourcing by the Internal 
Revenue Service, IRS, of collection of unpaid and past due Federal 
income taxes. The bidding process for the initial contracts is 
currently underway. Eventually, after full implementation of the 
program, it is estimated that these contracts will create up to 4,000 
well paying private-sector jobs.
  The amendment that Senator DeWine and I are offering today would 
establish a preference under the debt collection contracting program 
for contractors who meet certain threshold criteria relating to 
employment of disabled veterans and other severely disabled persons. 
The amendment further requires that at least a specified percentage of 
the individuals employed by the contractor to provide debt collection 
services under the contract with the IRS qualify as disabled veterans 
or severely disabled persons.
  If Federal employees conducted the same tax collection activities, 
current law would give preferences to disabled veterans in filling 
those Federal jobs. In addition, if other persons with severe 
disabilities were employed by the Federal Government in those jobs, 
those disabled persons would benefit from the Federal Government's long 
history of nondiscrimination and policies of promoting job 
opportunities for the disabled.
  Despite multiple Federal programs, benefits offered thorough a 
variety of agencies, and various tax incentives, unemployment rates for 
persons with disabilities, PWDs, are extremely high. The 2000 Census 
estimated that there were 31 million working-age Americans with 
disabilities, with an unemployment rate of 70-80 percent. Today, there 
are 2.6 million veterans receiving service-connected benefits, 
including disability benefits with an additional 340,000-plus 
applications pending by other veterans.
  By enacting legislation to allow the IRS to outsource debt 
collection, Congress certainly did not intend to curtail the national 
commitment to creating meaningful job opportunities for disabled 
veterans and other severely disabled persons. Indeed, the contracts 
which the IRS will soon execute with private-sector debt collection 
companies provide a unique opportunity for the Federal government to 
stimulate creation of well-paying jobs for disabled veterans and other 
persons with severe disabilities.
  To realize this opportunity, however, Congress must act to assure 
that existing Federal employment preferences for disabled veterans and 
Federal policies promoting opportunities for other severely disabled 
persons are carried forward as a part of the IRS's contracting 
criteria. My amendment, that I am happy to be offering with Senator 
DeWine, achieves this goal.
  Our amendment would establish a preference for companies that 
currently employ a minimum of 50 disabled veterans or persons with 
severe disabilities, who also must be capable of fulfilling the task. 
Once the IRS award is made, the debt collection contractor would be 
required to ensure that 35 percent of the workforce fulfilling the 
contract be new hires that are persons or veterans with disabilities.
  Under this amendment, a minimum of 140 full-time equivalent jobs, 
also known as FTE jobs, would be created for PWDs at third-party debt 
collection agencies contracted to collect certain past dues income 
taxes. An FTE job is equivalent to one (1) 40-hour job or two (2) 20-hr 
weekly employees or four (4) 10-hour per week employees. These jobs are 
often part-time; 140 FTEs could translate into close to 300 part-time 
positions for disabled individuals.
  This amendment would not only help to alleviate the current 
unemployment rate of PWDs, it would also generate substantial savings. 
These jobs pay anywhere from $19,000 annually up to $40,000 annually 
and can include health and 401(k) benefits. Even at the low end, this 
income level is too high to qualify for supplemental security income-
disability insurance benefits. Thus, individuals in these programs who 
take these jobs will no longer require government benefit subsidies 
from SSI or DI, even if otherwise qualified. Over a 5-year period, the 
SSI/DI savings are estimated to be $69-$75 million.
  To qualify under this amendment, a company must hire 50 PWDs. If 10 
companies do this, the net result is employment of 500 PWDs who 
currently do not have jobs. If 20 companies participate, 1,000 PWDs 
would be gainfully employed. The savings realized with 1,000 PWDs no 
longer needing SSI/DI benefits could be as high as $344 million.
  The IRS debt collection program is already established. The 
provisions in this amendment offer the added benefit of more jobs for 
disabled veterans and the reduction of Federal benefit program costs.
  We owe it to our service men and women to improve their futures in 
any way we can. We have the opportunity to not only show our support 
for our disabled veterans, but to also show the severely disabled that 
we believe in them and in their abilities.
  I urge my fellow Senators to support this amendment, to support our 
veterans, and to support the severely disabled.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin.


                           Amendment No. 2650

  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining on my 
amendment?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin has 8 minutes 
remaining.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. I note how pleased I am that the Senator from Colorado, 
Mr. Salazar, is a cosponsor of this amendment.
  I yield 2 minutes to the Senator from Illinois who is also a 
cosponsor of my amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in favor of the 
amendment offered by Senator Feingold. I am pleased to be a cosponsor 
of the amendment.
  In recent years, the philosophy in Washington has been that you can 
spend without consequence or sacrifice. That we can fight a war in Iraq 
and a war on terror, protect our homeland, provide our citizens with 
Medicare and Social Security, and maintain our domestic priorities, all 
while cutting taxes for the wealthy and funding every local project 
there is.
  If you are wondering how Congress pays for all this, it doesn't. 
Instead, billions of dollars are borrowed from other countries and put 
on a credit card for our children to pay off. Yet, when it comes time 
to pay these bills, no one can seem to agree on any tax cuts to defer 
or any programs to cut.
  Every family knows that it is one thing to use a credit card; it is 
another thing to keep spending money you don't have. You have to pay as 
you go, which is a rule most Americans live by.
  Washington once did too, until the White House and my colleagues on 
the other side of the aisle abandoned it to push through the 
President's tax breaks.
  This attempt to pass $60 billion in tax breaks despite record 
breaking deficits is just the latest example of the fiscal 
irresponsibility in this city.
  The amendment offered by Senator Feingold is about restoring 
responsible budgeting. Previously, PAYGO rules applied equally to 
increases in mandatory spending and tax cuts.
  Unfortunately, the rules were changed, and now the requirements of 
budget discipline apply to only half of the budget--the spending part.
  The problem is, that there is no such thing as half a budget. Budget 
discipline requires enforcing control over both sides of the ledger.
  The original PAYGO rules were abandoned to provide for a series of 
unfunded tax breaks. In order to pay for these tax breaks, the 
Government had to borrow money from countries like Japan and China.
  And we borrowed from the Social Security Trust Fund. In the process, 
our national debt shot up to $8 trillion, and

[[Page 27036]]

it is still rising. Last year, for example, our national commitments 
exceeded our national resources by more than $550 billion.
  Americans deserve better financial leadership.
  Washington could learn a lot from the American people about fiscal 
responsibility. The people I talk to in Illinois are not fooled by 
what's going on. They know what is happening with higher deficits and 
reduced levels of Government service.
  They understand that, in this life, you get what you pay for and if 
you don't pay for it today, it will cost you more tomorrow.
  The people I have met with know that if you need to spend more money 
on something, you also need to make more money, and if your income 
falls, your spending must fall, too. This is the essence of the PAYGO 
rules we are trying to reinstate today. Changes in spending must be 
offset by changes in revenue, and vice versa.
  The people I talk to understand that when you have massive costs 
coming down the road, you need to prepare for them. There is no excuse 
for ignoring the financial consequences of foreseeable expenses--
whether it is the rising costs of health care, the retirement of the 
baby boom generation, or the growing inequality of wealth in our 
society.
  So when you are already deep in debt--as the Federal Government is 
now--and you are facing a mountain of debt in the future, it is just 
not the right time to be giving out $60 billion in tax cuts, even if 
many of these cuts have merit.
  And if you are intent on giving out these tax cuts, let's find a way 
to pay for them.
  And that is why it is so important that we reinstate PAYGO in a way 
that meaningfully enforces the budget discipline that both sides of the 
aisle need in order to honestly tackle our short-term and long-term 
fiscal challenges.
  It is time for some adult supervision to return to the budgeting 
process. PAYGO provides a necessary tool at a necessary time.
  I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. I thank the Senator from Illinois. I ask unanimous 
consent that it be in order at this time to ask for the yeas and nays 
on my amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.


                    Amendment No. 2653, as Modified

  Mr. BAUCUS. I ask unanimous consent to modify Reid amendment No. 2653 
with the text I now send to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, the amendment is so modified.
  The amendment (No. 2653), as modified, is as follows:

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

 Subtitle B--Extending Tax Incentives for Renewable Energy Production 
                   and Energy Efficient Construction

     SECTION 411. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCTION CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), and (9) of 
     section 45(d) (relating to qualified facilities) are amended 
     by striking ``2008'' each place it appears and inserting 
     ``2011''.

     SEC. 412. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (2)(A)(i)(II) and (3)(A)(ii) (relating to energy 
     credit) is amended by striking ``2008'' both places it 
     appears and inserting ``2011''.

     SEC. 413. EXTENSION OF CLEAN RENEWABLE ENERGY BONDS THROUGH 
                   2010.

       Section 54(m) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 414. EXTENSION OF ENERGY EFFICIENT COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS 
                   DEDUCTION THROUGH 2010.

       Section 179D(h) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 415. EXTENSION OF NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 45L(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 416. EXTENSION OF RESIDENTIAL RENEWABLE ENERGY EFFICIENT 
                   PROPERTY CREDIT THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25D(g) is amended to read as follows:
       ``(a) Termination.--The credit allowed under this section 
     shall not apply to--
       ``(1) property described in paragraph (1) or (2) of 
     subsection (d) placed in service after December 31, 2010, and
       ``(2) property described in subsection (d)(3) placed in 
     service after December 31, 2007.''.

     SEC. 417. EXTENSION OF NONBUSINESS ENERGY PROPERTY CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25C(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 418. IMPOSITION OF WITHHOLDING ON CERTAIN PAYMENTS MADE 
                   BY GOVERNMENT ENTITIES.

       (a) In General.--Section 3402 is amended by adding at the 
     end the following new subsection:
       ``(t) Extension of Withholding to Certain Payments Made by 
     Government Entities.--
       ``(1) General rule.--The Government of the United States, 
     every State, every political subdivision thereof, and every 
     instrumentality of the foregoing (including multi-State 
     agencies) making any payment for goods and services which is 
     subject to withholding shall deduct and withhold form such 
     payment a tax in an amount equal to 3 percent of such 
     payment.
       ``(2) Exceptions.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any 
     payment--
       ``(A) except as provided in subparagraph (B), which is 
     subject to withholding under any other provision of this 
     chapter or chapter 3,
       ``(B) which is subject to withholding under section 3406 
     and from which amounts are being withheld under such section,
       ``(C) of interest,
       ``(D) for real property,
       ``(E) to any tax-exempt entity, foreign government, or 
     other entity subject to the requirements of paragraph (1),
       ``(F) made pursuant to a classified or confidential 
     contract (as defined in section 6050M(e)(3)), and
       ``(G) made by a political subdivision of a State (or any 
     instrumentality thereof) which makes less than $100,000,000 
     of such payments annually.
       ``(3) Coordination with other sections.--For purposes of 
     sections 3403 and 3404 and for purposes of so much of 
     subtitle F (except section 7205) as relates to this chapter, 
     payments to any person of any payment for goods and services 
     which is subject to withholding shall be treated as if such 
     payments were wages paid by an employer to an employee.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section 
     shall apply to payments made after December 31, 2005.

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendments be laid aside so that the Senator from Arkansas, Mrs. 
Lincoln, may offer an amendment at the very least. If the time has now 
run and we are going to begin voting, at least she is next in the queue 
after the amendments that we have already listed.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The majority leader is recognized.
  Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that following the 
vote in relation to the Coburn amendment the Senate proceed to votes in 
relation to the following amendments in the sequence ordered; provided 
there be 2 minutes equally divided between the votes and that no second 
degrees be in order to the amendments prior to the votes: Grassley 
amendment No. 2654, Durbin amendment No. 2596, Obama amendment No. 
2605, Kennedy amendment No. 2588, Reed amendment No. 2626, Feingold 
amendment No. 2650, and Sununu amendment No. 2651.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                    Amendment No. 2647, as Modified

  Mr. BAUCUS. I ask unanimous consent to modify the previously adopted 
amendment No. 2647. I send the modification to the desk and I ask for 
its adoption.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment (No. 2647), as modified, was agreed to as follows:

       On page 322, line 22, insert after 1986 ``which has an 
     average daily worldwide production of crude oil of at least 
     500,000 barrels for the taxable year and''

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the motion to 
waive the Budget Act with respect to the amendment of the Senator from 
Mississippi offered on behalf of the Senator from Oklahoma.

[[Page 27037]]

  The yeas and nays have been ordered.
  The clerk will please call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
and the Senator from Hawaii (Mr. Inouye) are necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 51, nays 47, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 335 Leg.]

                                YEAS--51

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Burns
     Burr
     Carper
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     Dayton
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lott
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Obama
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thune
     Vitter

                                NAYS--47

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Bunning
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Frist
     Harkin
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murkowski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Roberts
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Shelby
     Stabenow
     Thomas
     Voinovich
     Warner
     Wyden

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Inouye
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote the yeas are 51, the nays are 47. 
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted in 
the affirmative, the motion is not agreed to. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Iowa is recognized.


                           Amendment No. 2654

  Mr. GRASSLEY. I call up the Grassley amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will please report the Grassley 
amendment.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Iowa [Mr. Grassley] proposes an amendment 
     numbered 2654.

  The amendment is as follows:

             (Purpose: To express the sense of the Senate)

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

     SEC. ___. SENSE OF THE SENATE.

       (a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following findings:
       (1) As many as 44,000,000 Americans are estimated to lack 
     health insurance during the course of the year, many of whom 
     are uninsured for a short period of time while a smaller 
     number face longer periods without coverage.
       (2) Rising health care costs contribute to the problem of 
     the uninsured and make it more difficult to find a simple 
     solution to make health care affordable.
       (3) There is not a one-size fits all solution to address 
     health care coverage issues.
       (4) Businesses have competing needs for their resources, 
     including investments to ensure their competitiveness and 
     providing health care coverage for their employees and 
     dependents.
       (5) Lower tax rates on dividends and capital gains saved 
     24,000,000 families an average of nearly $950 on their 2004 
     taxes, including about 7,000,000 seniors who saved, on 
     average, $1,230 each.
       (6) These pro-growth tax cuts have spurred economic 
     development and job creation and have been partly responsible 
     for an increase in tax receipts.
       (7) Of the more than 30,000,000 tax returns that included 
     dividend income, those with adjusted gross income of less 
     than $75,000 accounted for 64 percent, or over 19,000,000 of 
     such returns.
       (8) Of the nearly 23,000,000 tax returns that included 
     capital gains, 62 percent of these returns, or about 
     14,000,000, had less than $75,000 in adjusted gross income.
       (9) Allowing taxes to increase will make it harder for 
     employers and individuals to afford health care insurance, 
     leading to more individuals without health insurance.
       (b) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate 
     that the Senate should--
       (1) prevent an increase in taxes on millions of Americans 
     by not allowing the tax policy enacted in 2003 to expire; and
       (2) extend tax policies that have proven to enhance 
     economic growth, create jobs, and improve business' and 
     individuals' ability to afford health insurance coverage; and
       (3) address the multiple aspects of our Nation's health 
     care crisis, including the need to make health care more 
     affordable, to expand coverage, and to strengthen the health 
     care safety net by--
       (A) promoting the use of health care technology, which will 
     help reduce medical errors that contribute to higher costs 
     and promote greater efficiency in care delivery;
       (B) providing new financial assistance and tax credits to 
     make health insurance more affordable;
       (C) creating financial incentives for young adults to 
     purchase lifetime, portable health insurance;
       (D) expanding health insurance coverage options for low-
     income entrepreneurs and self-employed individuals;
       (E) increasing access to specialty care within the health 
     care safety net by providing a tax deduction to physician 
     specialists who provide care for patients referred from 
     health care safety net providers;
       (F) reducing regulatory burdens on health care safety net 
     providers that lead to higher administrative costs and a 
     diversion of funds that could be spent on patient care; and
       (G) improving outreach efforts to maximize participation of 
     eligible beneficiaries in Federal health care safety net 
     programs.

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this is an alternative to the Durbin 
sense-of-the-Senate resolution. The Durbin amendment in essence says 
certain taxes should be extended and that money ought to be used to 
provide health care and insurance for children.
  We agree that more needs to be done to help uninsured people. But we 
believe that the pretax policy in place is such a good tax policy--for 
instance, Chairman Greenspan saying that the tax policy has been good 
for the recovery and the extended growth, bringing in $274 billion this 
year over last year. We think we need to do all the things--expanding 
the economy and everything else--because it is through an expanding 
economy that middle-income people advance themselves; that we have an 
opportunity then for more people through more income to be able to buy 
health insurance. We have to do all those things. We can't change tax 
policy and count that as doing it.
  I urge this as an alternative to Senator Durbin's amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I greatly respect my colleague from Iowa. 
The Grassley amendment is a clear explanation of why we have never done 
anything to expand health care. Do you know why? Because the Grassley 
amendment says we can have it all. We can give $20 billion in tax cuts 
to the wealthiest people in America and we can provide health care for 
children. It doesn't add up, just like this budget doesn't add up. What 
we have to understand is this. I give you a choice: Take away the tax 
breaks, half of which go to people who make over $1 million a year, 
take the money and insure all the children in America. That is my 
amendment.
  Senator Grassley's amendment doesn't provide any resources or any 
funds to insure the children. What it says is if we give enough money 
to the wealthiest people in America, surely out of the charity of their 
hearts they will take care of the kids. We know better. There are more 
and more uninsured every single year.
  I urge you to defeat the Grassley amendment and consider voting for 
the Durbin amendment.
  I raise a point of order that the amendment violates the Byrd rule, 
section 313(b)(1)(a) of the Budget Act.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I move to waive the budget point of 
order and ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 53, nays 45, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 336 Leg.]

                                YEAS--53

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback

[[Page 27038]]


     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                                NAYS--45

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this question, the yeas are 53, the nays 
are 45. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having 
voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Illinois.


                           Amendment No. 2596

  Mr. DURBIN. It is my understanding under the unanimous consent 
request that my amendment is next in line.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  Mr. DURBIN. Do I need to call up the amendment?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment is pending.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, life and the Senate are about choices. 
Here are your choices with this amendment. You can give a capital gains 
and dividends tax cut that goes primarily to the wealthiest Americans. 
In fact, 75 percent of the capital gains tax cuts goes to people making 
over $200,000 a year; 1.5 million taxpayers will benefit from that new 
tax cut, people who are doing pretty well in life. Or you can take the 
same amount of money and provide health insurance for 9 million 
uninsured children in America. The cost? The same thing: $10 billion 
each year.
  There is the choice--give tax cuts to the wealthiest people in 
America or provide health insurance for 9 million kids who don't have 
it, children of families who go to work every single day and don't have 
health insurance. The choice is pretty clear. A lot of people talk 
about moral values and family values. Maybe the choice in this 
amendment gets down to those questions.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I am going to give the Senator from Illinois an 
opportunity to come down out of the grandstand and play on the same 
playing field I do, and the Senator will have an opportunity to take 
care of all those people.
  The Senator had an opportunity 2 weeks ago on the Deficit Reduction 
Act. All the things we had in there for the people who do not have 
health care the Senator had an opportunity to vote for and didn't.
  Just to name a few of these: We had the Family Opportunity Act that 
would have helped 500,000 severely disabled children. The Senator voted 
against that. We had a vote against a bill in regard to the children's 
health insurance shortfall. The Senator voted against that. The Senator 
voted against an outreach and enrollment to get eligible children 
health care coverage for which they are entitled. If the Senator were 
serious about helping low-income people, the Senator would have voted 
for that because we took care of a lot of the children the Senator is 
talking about.
  Mr. BYRD. I ask that Senators address each other in the third person, 
not in the second person.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia is correct; if 
Senators would address each other through the Chair and in the third 
person.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I raise a point of order that the amendment is not 
germane to the underlying bill.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, do I have time remaining?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time has expired.
  Mr. DURBIN. I move to waive the applicable budget provisions for 
consideration of the amendment. I ask for the yeas and nays on the 
motion to waive.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the motion to 
waive the Budget Act for the consideration of amendment No. 2596.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 43, nays 55, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 337 Leg.]

                                YEAS--43

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--55

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 43, the nays are 
55. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois is recognized for 1 
minute.


                           Amendment No. 2605

  Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, amendment No. 2605 deals with Hurricane 
Katrina contracting. This sense-of-the-Senate amendment I offer with 
Senators Coburn, Lautenberg, Ensign, and Johnson is a simple effort to 
enforce some accountability and transparency into the contracting 
process.
  FEMA needs to reopen its no-bid contracts. FEMA representatives 
testified before Senate committees they would do so. They have now 
backed away from that. That is unacceptable.
  I hope my colleagues will support this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
amendment be adopted.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The 
amendment is adopted.
  The amendment (No. 2605) was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 2588

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is now on the amendment from the 
Senator from Massachusetts, Mr. Kennedy, with 2 minutes evenly divided.
  The Senator from Massachusetts is recognized for 1 minute.
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, this is a very simple amendment but an 
amendment of enormous importance

[[Page 27039]]

and consequence for the children of this Nation.
  If you look at this chart that shows virtually all the industrial 
nations of the world, we have the highest instance of child poverty of 
all industrial nations in the world.
  This amendment I offer adds a 1-percent surtax on millionaires who 
pay their contributions in terms of the Internal Revenue Service. It is 
just a 1-percent add-on. It pays into a fund to fight child poverty, a 
designated fund that will eventually be decided by the leadership and 
by the President of the United States.
  This is a moral issue. It is a children's issue. It is a value issue. 
And this is something that can make an enormous difference to the 
children of this country.
  Here in the richest country in the world, we allow children to 
suffer, without money, without a home, without food.
  No great nation can ignore this challenge. The images of Katrina 
proved that. We can lift children out of poverty, all it requires is 
the will to do it and the leadership to make it happen.
  In the powerful word of the gospel, ``To whom much is given, much is 
required.'' I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, there is substantial research that shows 
the way to make progress in eliminating poverty is to encourage healthy 
marriages, responsible fathership, full-time work, and education.
  The poverty rate for married couple families is 5.5 percent. The 
overall poverty rate is 12.7 percent. The poverty rate for single-
family households, if there is no husband, is 28 percent.
  So it is quite obvious, poverty reduction should not be a partisan 
issue. We know what we need to do to reduce poverty. So we need to roll 
up our sleeves, work together, strengthen marriage, strengthen 
fatherhood, promote education, and get people full-time work. That is 
the way to end poverty. Statistics prove it.
  I make the point that the pending amendment is not germane to the 
measure now before the Senate, and I raise a point of order against it 
under section 305 of the Budget Act.
  Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections of that act for purposes of the pending amendment, and I ask 
for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will please call the roll.
  The bill clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 36, nays 62, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 338 Leg.]

                                YEAS--36

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--62

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Biden
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lincoln
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Pryor
     Roberts
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 36, the nays are 
62. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, before we have the next rollcall on the 
Reed amendment, I have been asked by many Members if we could do what 
worked so successfully for Senator Specter on his bill by enforcing the 
10-minute rule. The leader has asked me to say that is what we are 
going to do. So we will have regular order after the 10-minute rollcall 
vote, so people should stay around close to make sure they get their 
vote recorded.
  We are going to enforce the Specter rule. If you don't like it, blame 
Specter.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is 2 minutes equally----
  Mr. SPECTER. Mr. President, I object.
  Mr. REID addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader.
  Mr. REID. I don't know how many amendments we have but lots of them 
tonight. I am sure they are all very meritorious. I have an amendment 
dealing with renewables. I am going to allow a voice vote on that. I 
think others might want to follow that example. I think with rare 
exception we kind of know how they are going to turn out anyway. You 
either win or lose. The vote outcome is the same whether it is by a 
rollcall or voice vote. So I am going to have a voice vote on my 
renewable energy amendment. I hope others would follow suit on some of 
theirs.


                           Amendment No. 2626

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is 2 minutes equally divided on the Reed 
of Rhode Island amendment.
  The Senator from Rhode Island is recognized.
  Mr. REED. I thank the Chair.
  My amendment would fully fund the LIHEAP program, providing a 1-year 
temporary windfall profits tax on large oil companies. Previously, a 
majority of this body has voted to fully fund LIHEAP. We have not had 
an offset. This would be an offset. The mechanism I propose would be 
based upon Senator Schumer's proposal. It does not have the problems 
that were identified by Senator Domenici with respect to the Dorgan and 
Dodd proposal.
  My amendment will tax these companies at an equitable rate. It will 
raise $2.92 billion. It will fully fund LIHEAP, and it will provide 
relief to families throughout this country who literally struggle, who 
either choose to heat or to eat. I think we can do much better to help 
our families. There has been majority support of this bill. I hope we 
have sufficient support that we can actually provide the resources to 
provide help to struggling families this winter.
  I urge all my colleagues to support the amendment.
  I retain any time I have remaining.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I support the LIHEAP program. Most everybody in this 
body supports the LIHEAP program. I have had an opportunity to vote for 
that even in recent days. But we have to make sure we do it in the 
right way. I have even tried to get oil companies to contribute to the 
low-income fuel fund. But here we have the Senator resurrecting the old 
nonworkable windfall profits tax. As Senator Domenici said in previous 
debate, this is one way of raising the price of gasoline and other 
fuels.
  I ask you to oppose this amendment, and I would raise the point that 
the amendment is not germane.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
  Mr. REED. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the Budget Act, I 
move to waive the applicable sections of the act with regard to the 
pending amendment, and I ask for the yeas and nays.

[[Page 27040]]

  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Bunning). Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion. The clerk will call the 
roll.
  The assistant Journal clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 50, nays 48, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 339 Leg.]

                                YEAS--50

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Coleman
     Collins
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Gregg
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Sununu
     Thune
     Voinovich
     Wyden

                                NAYS--48

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Stevens
     Talent
     Thomas
     Vitter
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Martinez). On this vote, the yeas are 50, 
the nays are 48. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not 
having voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of 
order is sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I have a list of amendments on which I 
wish to propound a unanimous consent request.
  I ask unanimous consent that following the disposition of the Sununu 
amendment, that Senator Lincoln be recognized to offer an amendment and 
speak for 2 minutes, after which the amendment will be withdrawn; 
further, that the Senate then proceed to votes in relation to the 
following amendments in sequence order; provided that there be 2 
minutes equally divided between the votes and that no second-degree 
amendments be in order to the amendment prior to the vote: Schumer 
amendment No. 2635, Reid amendment No. 2653, Nelson amendment No. 2601, 
Bingaman amendment No. 2642, Durbin amendment No. 2623, and Nelson 
amendment No. 2625.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The 
Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, was the last unanimous consent request 
agreed to?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. It was.


              Modification to Amendment No. 2635 Vitiated

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, we have a matter we have to fix. I ask 
unanimous consent that the modification to the Schumer amendment No. 
2635 be vitiated.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                    Amendment No. 2653, as Modified

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, the modification should be to the Reid of 
Nevada amendment.
  The amendment, as modified, is as follows:

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

 Subtitle B--Extending Tax Incentives for Renewable Energy Production 
                   and Energy Efficient Construction

     SECTION 411. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCTION CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), and (9) of 
     section 45(d) (relating to qualified facilities) are amended 
     by striking ``2008'' each place it appears and inserting 
     ``2011''.

     SEC. 412. EXTENSION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Paragraphs (2)(A)(i)(II) and (3)(A)(ii) (relating to energy 
     credit) is amended by striking ``2008'' both places it 
     appears and inserting ``2011''.

     SEC. 413. EXTENSION OF CLEAN RENEWABLE ENERGY BONDS THROUGH 
                   2010.

       Section 54(m) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 414. EXTENSION OF ENERGY EFFICIENT COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS 
                   DEDUCTION THROUGH 2010.

       Section 179D(h) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 415. EXTENSION OF NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 45L(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 416. EXTENSION OF RESIDENTIAL RENEWABLE ENERGY EFFICIENT 
                   PROPERTY CREDIT THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25D(g) is amended to read as follows:
       ``(a) Termination.--The credit allowed under this section 
     shall not apply to--
       ``(1) property described in paragraph (1) or (2) of 
     subsection (d) placed in service after December 31, 2010, and
       ``(2) property described in subsection (d)(3) placed in 
     service after December 31, 2007.''.

     SEC. 417. EXTENSION OF NONBUSINESS ENERGY PROPERTY CREDIT 
                   THROUGH 2010.

       Section 25C(g) (relating to termination) is amended by 
     striking ``2007'' and inserting ``2010''.

     SEC. 418. IMPOSITION OF WITHHOLDING ON CERTAIN PAYMENTS MADE 
                   BY GOVERNMENT ENTITIES.

       (a) In General.--Section 3402 is amended by adding at the 
     end the following new subsection:
       ``(t) Extension of Withholding to Certain Payments Made by 
     Government Entities.--
       ``(1) General rule.--The Government of the United States, 
     every State, every political subdivision thereof, and every 
     instrumentality of the foregoing (including multi-State 
     agencies) making any payment for goods and services which is 
     subject to withholding shall deduct and withhold form such 
     payment a tax in an amount equal to 3 percent of such 
     payment.
       ``(2) Exceptions.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any 
     payment--
       ``(A) except as provided in subparagraph (B), which is 
     subject to withholding under any other provision of this 
     chapter or chapter 3,
       ``(B) which is subject to withholding under section 3406 
     and from which amounts are being withheld under such section,
       ``(C) of interest,
       ``(D) for real property,
       ``(E) to any tax-exempt entity, foreign government, or 
     other entity subject to the requirements of paragraph (1),
       ``(F) made pursuant to a classified or confidential 
     contract (as defined in section 6050M(e)(3)), and
       ``(G) made by a political subdivision of a State (or any 
     instrumentality thereof) which makes less than $100,000,000 
     of such payments annually.
       ``(3) Coordination with other sections.--For purposes of 
     sections 3403 and 3404 and for purposes of so much of 
     subtitle F (except section 7205) as relates to this chapter, 
     payments to any person of any payment for goods and services 
     which is subject to withholding shall be treated as if such 
     payments were wages paid by an employer to an employee.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section 
     shall apply to payments made after December 31, 2005.


                           amendment no. 2650

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There are 2 minutes equally divided on the 
Feingold amendment. Who yields time? The Senator from Wisconsin.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I thank my cosponsors, Senators Conrad, 
Chafee, Obama, and Salazar. This is a good old-fashioned, classic pay-
go amendment. This is the rule under which we used to operate.
  It is very simple. Under this pay-go amendment, you pay for what you 
want. If you want to increase entitlement spending, you have to pay for 
it. If you want to cut taxes, you have to pay for it. With the help of 
this budget rule, we actually balanced the Federal books, and we did so 
without using the Social Security surplus.
  Without this rule, we have been driven back into the deficit ditch. 
We have begun to pile up record amounts of debt that our children and 
grandchildren will have to pay.
  I urge my colleagues to support this time-tested, commonsense rule.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise the point, first of all, that we

[[Page 27041]]

voted on a like amendment a couple of weeks ago. But I want to say why 
the amendment is defective, as I would have said then. It would require 
us to raise taxes to extend expiring tax cuts, but it would allow 
entitlement spending to continue to grow without any offset. This then 
creates a double standard between current tax law and current spending 
law.
  The amendment also is not germane, and so I raise a point of order.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections of that act for the consideration of the pending amendment. I 
ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion. The clerk will call the 
roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 50, nays 48, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 340 Leg.]

                                YEAS--50

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Coburn
     Collins
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     McCain
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Stabenow
     Voinovich
     Wyden

                                NAYS--48

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote the yeas are 50, the nays are 48. 
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted in 
the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained, and the amendment falls.


                           Amendment No. 2651

  There will now be 2 minutes equally divided prior to a vote on the 
Sununu amendment.
  Who yields time?
  The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Mr. SUNUNU. Mr. President, my amendment is quite straightforward. It 
deals with a very large tax loophole that allows Government-sponsored 
entities, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to avoid paying any State or 
local taxes whatsoever. It is a huge exemption for companies that are 
private, for-profit corporations, with their own shareholders. These 
companies have far higher profits and return on equity than so-called 
big oil that we have heard all of this criticism about for the last 
several hours.
  There is no reason they cannot pay State and local taxes like any 
other private, for-profit company, contribute back to those States, 
cities, and towns in a legitimate, straightforward way through the Tax 
Code. I think this is appropriate. There is no reason we should have 
such an enormous loophole for companies that earn millions of dollars, 
enough to pay their top executives not $2 million a year or $6 million 
a year or $8 million a year but in some cases $10 million a year that 
their chief executives have been paid over the last 3 to 5 years.
  That certainly is the kind of money that makes it legitimate for them 
to be paying State and local taxes like any other for-profit company.
  I ask for the yeas and nays on my amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays are ordered.
  The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  (Several Senators addressed the Chair).
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, this amendment only singles out two 
companies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which have an important mission: 
homeownership in our States, moving out regional imbalances in the 
mortgage supply, integrating regional mortgage markets. If this 
amendment is passed, here is what happens: The housing markets are 
hurt. At a time when we are worried about our housing markets, we are 
worried about a housing bubble that may burst, we are worried about so 
many parts of the housing market, to pull the rug out from under Fannie 
Mae and Freddie Mac, which have done an incredible job, would make no 
sense whatsoever.
  All the other corporations are not talked about here, just Fannie and 
Freddie. Therefore, I think this amendment deserves to be defeated.
  Mr. President, the pending amendment is not germane. Therefore, I 
raise a point of order pursuant to sections 305(b)(2) and 310(e) of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The point of order is well taken. The 
amendment falls.
  Under the previous order, the Senator from Arkansas is recognized.


                           Amendment No. 2652

  Mrs. LINCOLN. Mr. President, I would like to call up my amendment 
numbered 2652, please.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant journal clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Arkansas [Mrs. Lincoln], for herself, Ms. 
     Snowe, Mr. Obama and Mr. Rockefeller, proposes an amendment 
     numbered 2652.

  Mrs. LINCOLN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the reading of 
the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

    (Purpose: To modify the income threshold used to calculate the 
              refundable portion of the child tax credit)

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

     SEC. __. $10,000 INCOME THRESHOLD USED TO CALCULATE 
                   REFUNDABLE PORTION OF CHILD TAX CREDIT.

       (a) In General.--Section 24(d) (relating to portion of 
     credit refundable) is amended--
       (1) by striking ``as exceeds'' and all that follows through 
     ``, or'' in paragraph (1)(B)(i) and inserting ``as exceeds 
     $10,000, or'', and
       (2) by striking paragraph (3).
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2004.
       (c) Application of Sunset to This Section.--Each amendment 
     made by this section shall be subject to title IX of the 
     Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 to 
     the same extent and in the same manner as the provision of 
     such Act to which such amendment relates.

  Mrs. LINCOLN. Mr. President, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, 
the gulf breezes blew back the curtains and America and the world very 
clearly saw the face of poverty in the United States. We and the rest 
of the world saw a situation where many of our poorest families, our 
American families, were left to fend for themselves--many not even able 
to afford a bus ticket out of town to evacuate.
  We find ourselves today reconciling our priorities, something that 
hard-working American families do every day. They reconcile their 
budgets, they reconcile their priorities, to decide what is essential 
to that family and what is a luxury.
  I do not believe we can have this discussion today without bringing 
up what I find, in our Nation, to be one of our greatest priorities and 
by far one of our greatest blessings, and that is our children. I 
believe we have an opportunity right now to help lift those families in 
Louisiana and, indeed, across

[[Page 27042]]

this entire Nation. In 2001 and again in 2003, Senator Snowe and I 
worked together to make sure that working families of many low-income 
children were included in the child tax credit.
  Unfortunately, a recent report, highlighted in the New York Times, 
shows that almost one-third of children do not qualify for that child 
tax credit because they are in families earning too low an income. When 
you break that finding down by race, it is even more disheartening. 
About half of all African-American children and half of all Latino 
children are left out of the full tax credit, child tax credit, because 
their family's earnings are too low to qualify.
  We are talking about working families. To qualify for this tax 
credit, you have to be working and you have to have children.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has used her 2 minutes.
  Mrs. LINCOLN. I thank my colleagues for listening. I understand, due 
to the refundable nature of this credit, it is not germane to the 
reconciliation bill, and as a result, I will not ask for a vote, but I 
do ask our colleagues to remember what our priorities are tonight.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under previous order, the amendment is 
withdrawn.
  There is now 2 minutes equally divided prior to a vote on the Schumer 
amendment.
  The Senator from New York.


                           Amendment No. 2635

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, this amendment creates a temporary levy 
on the excess profits of U.S. oil companies and it does it in a 
different way. It takes that money and provides a nonrefundable tax 
credit of $100 in 2005 for every person in the household. The revenue 
mechanism in my amendment is an actual tax on windfall profits that 
exceed a 3-year historic average. That makes it easy for companies to 
calculate. Unlike the other windfall profits tax amendments that have 
come forward, this one will not increase production costs and fuel 
costs for American consumers. That is because it is levied on profits, 
not production; not on profits when oil is above $40 a barrel but only 
when the band of profits exceeds a set level.
  This was the same mechanism that Senator Reed used for LIHEAP, and it 
did get a good number of votes--50. The revenue of the amendment goes 
back to the U.S. taxpayer, not to any program, not to the Government, 
with a nonrefundable credit of $100 for every person in their 
household, and that is for 2005 only. It is revenue neutral.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I oppose this amendment. This is an 
increase in the price of gasoline. Also, I don't know how many times we 
have to vote on a windfall profits tax. This is at least the third or 
fourth time.
  Although there is a tax credit that the tax funds, I want everybody 
to know there is no guarantee that the tax will not be passed on to 
consumers with these higher prices at the pump as well as home heating.
  This amendment raises revenue. The bill before us raises revenue from 
oil already taxed. This new tax is not well designed and should be 
defeated.
  I raise a point of order that the amendment is not germane.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
  Mr. SCHUMER. I move to waive the relevant portions of the Budget Act 
and ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a 
sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant Journal clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. DeMint). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 33, nays 65, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 341 Leg.]

                                YEAS--33

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Clinton
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--65

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Conrad
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lincoln
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Pryor
     Roberts
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
       
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 33, the nays are 
65. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.


                    Amendment No. 2653, as Modified

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is 2 minutes equally divided prior to 
the motion on the Reid amendment.
  The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, this is a bipartisan amendment. It is very 
simple, direct, and to the point. We need more electricity that does 
not rely on increasingly expensive natural gas.
  The quickest way to get more electricity without using more natural 
gas is through the increased use of renewables with greater efficiency.
  Unfortunately, the deadlines for the renewable energy and efficiency 
tax incentives that we now have in law cut off much too soon to be 
really effective. So this amendment extends those deadlines through 
2010 to match the current tax incentives for conventional and fossil 
energy projects.
  I urge Members to support this amendment. It is fair, it is paid for, 
and it will make a quick and significant dent in the Nation's 
enormously expensive natural gas consumption.
  Nevadans and all Americans rely heavily on natural gas for 
electricity and heating. This Congress needs to take action to address 
the insanely high prices of natural gas as soon as possible.
  I ask unanimous consent that Senators Kerry, Snowe, Salazar, 
Lautenberg, Bayh, Bingaman, Jeffords, and Feinstein be added as 
cosponsors of the amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I happen to be the original author of 
section 45, renewable fuels.
  I have extended this provision already through 2008. The amendment 
will undermine the reconciliation bill by going beyond our 5-year 
budget window, and the amendment is no longer paid for.
  So, regrettably, I oppose this specific amendment. But as the author 
of section 45, you can be assured that when it is necessary to extend 
it, we will. I ask you to vote against this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate? If not, the question 
is on agreeing to the amendment, as modified.
  The amendment (No. 2653), as modified, was rejected.


                           Amendment No. 2601

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There will now be 2 minutes equally divided on 
the Nelson of Florida amendment.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, all of you have heard from your 
senior citizens. With the implementation of the prescription drug bill, 
our seniors have so many plans to choose from that they are confused--
and, in some cases, they are bewildered; in some cases, they are 
frightened about

[[Page 27043]]

making the wrong choice by the deadline and then not having the 
opportunity to correct it for 1 year.
  This amendment would extend the deadline from May to December. I hope 
for the sake of our seniors that you will vote for this amendment.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this amendment is simply not necessary. 
The first enrollment period began--can you believe it--just 2 days ago, 
and somebody says, You know, it is not long enough. It is going to last 
for 6 months--until May 15.
  There are lots of resources available. As one example, States have 
counselors available to assist beneficiaries under the State Health 
Insurance Program.
  That is the whole point of that program--to help beneficiaries 
understand the Medicare benefits in the legislation.
  The bottom line is that it is no picnic to sort through the fine 
print of health insurance. It even may rank among the most unpopular 
and complicated responsibilities of American adulthood--like 
deciphering your income tax.
  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services developed a nationwide 
network of other community-based organizations that can provide 
beneficiaries one-on-one assistance. The prescription drug plans base 
their proposal to serve Medicare beneficiaries on the enrollment period 
specified in the law. The amendment would affect those proposals and 
could lead to higher costs for both beneficiaries and the government.
  I, for one, am tired of people on the other side seeming to have a 
lack of confidence in our American senior citizens who are often well 
informed about the choices they can make and make good decisions.
  This amendment is not needed, and I raise a point of order on 
germaneness.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, how much time do I have 
remaining?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Sixteen seconds.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, so much of what the Senator 
from Iowa has said simply has not been the case--hundreds of plans that 
seniors are having to choose between.
  I move to waive the relevant parts of the Budget Act, and I ask for 
the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 51, nays 47, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 342 Leg.]

                                YEAS--51

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     DeWine
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Martinez
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Voinovich
     Warner
     Wyden

                                NAYS--47

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this question, the yeas are 51, the nays 
are 47. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having 
voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained. The amendment falls.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, there are four votes remaining. It is my 
understanding they will all be voiced. However, other Senators have 
said they have amendments they want to offer, as well. It is 
appropriate we begin to cut off the number of amendments we consider 
tonight. Four Senators contacted me: Senator Boxer, Senator Dayton, 
Senator Kerry, and Senator Landrieu. The time has come to limit the 
number of amendments we have tonight. We have done a pretty good job 
accommodating Senators.
  I ask unanimous consent after the three remaining amendments--
Senators Bingaman, Durbin, and Nelson--are taken up, and I am told will 
all be voiced, that following those amendments only the amendments then 
be in order are amendments offered by Senator Boxer, Senator Dayton, 
Senator Kerry, and Senator Landrieu, and that those be the only 
amendments remaining to be considered to the bill tonight and to the 
bill at all.
  I amend that by saying it is my understanding that Senator Landrieu 
has two, but they will be voiced and not require a recorded vote, and 
there will be a managers' amendment that will be in order to the bill. 
Senator Harkin would like to be added to the list with one amendment. 
So, therefore, it will be: Boxer, Dayton, Kerry, Landrieu, Landrieu--
again, Landrieu's will be voiced--and Harkin. I am hopeful some of 
these others will also be voiced when we get to them.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, in the 
request, please note I have two amendments.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Senator Dayton has two amendments.
  Mr. DAYTON. May I ask, do the managers intend to have final passage 
tonight?
  Mr. BAUCUS. That is our intention.
  Mr. DAYTON. All right. Thank you.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2642

  There is 2 minutes equally divided prior to a vote on the Bingaman 
amendment.
  The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, the Senate is not in order. We are making 
a lot of progress tonight, and we will make even greater progress if 
the Senate stays in order.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate will be in order.
  The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, I offer this amendment on behalf of 
myself, Senator Kerry, and Senator Snowe. This is an amendment that 
will create a tax credit for small businesses, to encourage them to 
offer employees health insurance. By ``small businesses,'' I have 
defined that in the amendment as employers with 50 or fewer employees.
  In my State, one of the biggest problems I hear that small employers 
complain about is their inability to cover the high cost of health 
care. This is a nonrefundable tax credit for the purchase of health 
insurance by the employer. The tax credit would range from 30 percent 
to 50 percent of the cost of a qualified health insurance expense, with 
smaller employers getting the largest credit.
  This is absolutely essential if we are going to expand health care 
coverage in the country. It is fully offset. I urge my colleagues to 
support this amendment and add it to this legislation before we 
complete final passage.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I know this amendment is well-intended 
because if there is anything I hear from my constituents, particularly 
small business people, it is the problems with health insurance. But it 
is not going to work with this legislation because it is going to make 
the reconciliation process out of order.

[[Page 27044]]

  So I ask the Members to oppose it.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2642) was rejected.


                           Amendment No. 2623

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There will be 2 minutes evenly divided prior 
to a vote on the Durbin amendment.
  The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, this amendment provides a fully offset tax 
credit to the very best companies in America. We call them patriotic 
employers. They are employers who invest in creating jobs in the United 
States, not overseas. They are employers who pay a decent wage, at 
least $7.75 an hour. They are employers who provide a retirement plan, 
either defined benefit or defined contribution, matching at least 5 
percent of workers' contributions. They are employers who pay health 
insurance, up to 60 percent of the workers' health care premiums. And 
they are employers who make up the difference when their employees, who 
are in the Guard and Reserve, go off to serve their country.
  These are the very best employers in America. We should reward them 
with a 1-percent tax credit, fully offset. Stand up for the best 
employers in America. Support this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this amendment is also well intended. It 
is not germane. I am not going to raise a point of germaneness. I raise 
the point that it does not fit in with the reconciliation.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate on the amendment? If 
not, the question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2623) was rejected.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Craig-
Rockefeller amendment also be added to the list of amendments still in 
order. And that will be it.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator restate the request.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Craig-
Rockefeller amendment be added to the list of amendments still in order 
tonight.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, in conjunction with the Craig amendment, 
I had an amendment I was going to offer as a substitute. So I want the 
Grassley amendment on there as well.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2625

  There will now be 2 minutes equally divided prior to a vote on the 
Nelson amendment.
  The Senator from Nebraska.
  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2625.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment is pending.
  Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Mr. President, it has already been offered 
and is ready.
  Mr. President, the Treasury Department has the capacity by law to 
outsource contracts to collect unpaid tax debts. As it currently 
stands, as they contract with employers, many of the benefits that have 
existed in the past for the hiring of disabled workers, disabled 
veterans, would not carry forth in these contract situations as they do 
for employment in the Federal Government.
  This amendment will enable the Treasury Department, in awarding 
contracts, to give a preference to those companies that hire and engage 
disabled workers and disabled veterans. There is no tax money involved 
in this. There is no tax credit. They just have a preference if they 
hire disabled workers. These disabled workers will come off the Social 
Security SSI benefits and the disability DI benefits. They will become 
taxpaying citizens.
  I think this is a great amendment. I hope my colleagues will accept 
it.
  I thank the Chair for the opportunity to speak.
  Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, 15 million persons with disabilities are 
unemployed and actively seeking employment. There simply has been no 
measurable change in the unemployment situation for persons with 
disabilities since the American's with Disabilities Act. That is 
unacceptable. It is wrong. It is something we have to change. We can do 
better, and we have to do better.
  Senator Nelson from Nebraska and I have an amendment that will do 
just that. Our amendment would establish a preference under the debt 
collection contracting program for contractors who hire people with 
disabilities and disabled veterans.
  This amendment would require that at least a specified percentage of 
the individuals employed by the contractor to provide debt collection 
services qualify as people with disabilities or disabled veterans.
  A provision of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 authorized the 
Internal Revenue Service to contract with private collection agencies 
to collect certain past due income taxes. If the same tax collection 
activities were still conducted by Federal employees, current law would 
give employment preferences to disabled veterans in filling those 
Federal jobs. In addition, if other persons with disabilities were 
employed by the Federal Government in those jobs, they would benefit 
from the Federal Government's long history of promoting job 
opportunities for people with disabilities.
  By enacting legislation to privatize debt collection and improve the 
IRS' tax collection efforts, Congress certainly did not intend to 
curtail the Government's commitment to creating meaningful job 
opportunities for people with disabilities and disabled veterans. So I 
urge my fellow Senators to support this amendment. Again, there are 15 
million persons with disabilities who are unemployed and actively 
seeking employment. We have an opportunity now to help put them back to 
work.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
amendment be adopted.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Ohio.
  Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, there are 15 million people with 
disabilities who are unemployed in this country. This amendment will 
help in a small way to deal with that problem.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
amendment be adopted.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment (No. 2625) was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California is recognized.


                           Amendment No. 2634

  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2634 and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from California [Mrs. Boxer] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2634.

  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of 
the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To provide an additional $500,000,000 for each of fiscal 
   years 2006 through 2010, to be used for readjustment counseling, 
   related mental health services, and treatment and rehabilitative 
   services for veterans with mental illness, post-traumatic stress 
                  disorder, or substance use disorder)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

     SEC. __. TREATMENT AND SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VETERANS.

       Out of any money in the Treasury of the United States not 
     otherwise appropriated, and in addition to any amount 
     otherwise appropriated, there are appropriated $500,000,000 
     to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs for each of fiscal years 
     2006 through 2010, to provide veterans suffering from mental 
     illness, post-traumatic stress disorder, or drug or alcohol 
     dependency with--

[[Page 27045]]

       (1) readjustment counseling and related mental health 
     services under section 1712A of title 38, United States Code; 
     and
       (2) treatment and rehabilitative services under section 
     1720A of such title.

     SEC. __. ELIMINATION OF THE SCHEDULED PHASE OUT OF THE 
                   LIMITATIONS ON PERSONAL EXEMPTIONS AND ITEMIZED 
                   DEDUCTIONS FOR INDIVIDUALS EARNING IN EXCESS OF 
                   $1,000,000.

       (a) Personal Exemptions.--Section 151(d)(3)(E) of the 
     Internal Revenue Code of 1986 is amended by adding at the end 
     the following new clause:
       ``(iii) Exception.--This subparagraph shall not apply with 
     respect to any individual whose adjusted gross income for the 
     taxable year exceeds $1,000,000 ($2,000,000 in the case of a 
     joint return).''.
       (b) Itemized Deductions.--Section 68(f) of such Code is 
     amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
       ``(3) Exception.--This subsection shall not apply with 
     respect to any individual whose adjusted gross income for the 
     taxable year exceeds $1,000,000 ($2,000,000 in the case of a 
     joint return).''.
       (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       (d) Application of EGTRRA Sunset.--The amendments made by 
     this section shall be subject to title IX of the Economic 
     Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 to the same 
     extent and in the same manner as the provision of such Act to 
     which such amendment relates.

  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I will explain the amendment. I will do so 
quickly.
  The Boxer amendment provides an additional $500 million per year for 
mental health services for our Nation's veterans over the next 5 years. 
This amendment is backed by the American Legion, AMVETS, and Disabled 
American Veterans.
  We pay for this in a very simple way. We say the tax cuts of 2001 
that have not yet taken effect for those earning over $1 million a year 
be deferred. We find that when we pay for this $500 million, we have 
millions left over to reduce the deficit.
  In closing, let me tell my colleagues a story.
  I got an e-mail from a woman who was married to CPT Michael Jon 
Pelkey, who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder for over a 
year. He sought help on several occasions but was discouraged by the 
wait time and the stigma. He thought his command would perceive him as 
worthless if he started therapy.
  His wife wrote:

       Michael passed away in our home at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma from 
     a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest on November 5, 
     2004.

  She said:

       I feel that my husband is a casualty of this war and to 
     date the Army has not [done enough for post-traumatic 
     stress].

  I know millionaires in California, and I know they would give up a 
tax cut to help--to help--our veterans who are fighting in deplorable 
conditions every single day.
  I hope my colleagues will take a stand for our veterans and say to 
the millionaires of this country: We know you want to help them.
  Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, how much time do I have?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. No time was provided under this order.
  Is there a sufficient second?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I raise a point of order on the 
germaneness of the amendment.
  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I move to waive the point of order, and I 
ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that these be 10-
minute votes, with 2 minutes between the votes, but otherwise 10-minute 
votes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 43, nays 55, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 343 Leg.]

                                YEAS--43

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Smith
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--55

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 43, the nays are 
55. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Massachusetts is recognized.


                           Amendment No. 2616

  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2616.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Kerry], for himself and 
     Mr. Obama, proposes an amendment numbered 2616.

  Mr. KERRY. I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To accelerate marriage penalty relief for the earned income 
  tax credit, to extend the election to include combat pay in earned 
    income, and to make modifications of effective dates of leasing 
         provisions of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004)

       On page 235, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following:

     SEC. __. ACCELERATION OF MARRIAGE PENALTY RELIEF WITH RESPECT 
                   TO THE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT.

       (a) In General.--Subparagraph (B) of section 32(b)(2) 
     (relating to joint returns) is amended--
       (1) in clause (ii) by striking ``, 2006, and 2007'', and
       (2) in clause (iii) by striking ``2007'' and inserting 
     ``2005''.
       (b) Inflation Amount.--Section 32(j)(1)(B)(ii) is amended 
     by striking ``calendar year 2007'' and inserting ``calendar 
     year 2005''.
       (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.

     SEC. __. EXTENSION OF ELECTION TO INCLUDE COMBAT PAY IN 
                   EARNED INCOME.

       (a) In General.--Subclause (II) of section 32(c)(2)(B)(vi) 
     (relating to earned income) is amended by striking ``January 
     1, 2006'' and inserting ``January 1, 2008''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.

     SEC. ___. MODIFICATIONS OF EFFECTIVE DATES OF LEASING 
                   PROVISIONS OF THE AMERICAN JOBS CREATION ACT OF 
                   2004.

       (a) In General.--Section 849(b) of the American Jobs 
     Creation Act of 2004 is amended by adding at the end the 
     following new paragraph:
       ``(5) Leases to foreign entities.--In the case of tax-
     exempt use property leased to a tax-exempt entity which is a 
     foreign person or entity, the amendments made by this part 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2004, with respect to leases entered into on or before March 
     12, 2004.''.
       (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall take effect as if

[[Page 27046]]

     included in the enactment of the American Jobs Creation Act 
     of 2004.

  Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, I rise to speak in favor of the amendment I 
am offering with Senator Kerry to make two simple yet critical 
improvements to the earned income credit and to reduce the Federal 
deficit. Our amendment provides relief from the marriage penalty and 
from the military service penalty faced by many low-income taxpayers.
  The EITC is one of the most effective programs to lift working 
Americans out of poverty. It rewards work, reduces tax burdens, and 
supplement wages that help a family to be self-sufficient.
  It is an idea that Republicans and Democrats can agree on because it 
works. Study after study has demonstrated that the EITC increases 
employment among single mothers and reduces reliance on cash welfare 
assistance. The EITC lifts millions of children and families out of 
poverty each year. Census data show that in 2003, the poverty rate 
among children would have been nearly 25 percent higher without the 
EITC.
  Established by the Ford administration in 1975 and celebrated by 
Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and Bill Clinton, this is a program 
that has long enjoyed bipartisan support. President Reagan 
characterized the EITC as one of the best ``pro-family'' and ``anti-
poverty'' programs.
  Unfortunately, as currently structured, the EITC has a marriage 
penalty. Working parents receive less tax relief if they marry than if 
they stay single. If we want to reduce poverty and improve the life 
chances of poor children, the last thing we should do is penalize 
marriage. Children with married parents generally have much lower rates 
of poverty and better educational outcomes. Fixing the marriage penalty 
is a matter of common sense.
  It is also something that this body agreed on in the 2001 tax bill. 
Unfortunately, unlike the marriage penalty relief for middle-income 
taxpayers, which was accelerated in 2003, full relief for the low-
income marriage penalty was delayed until 2008.
  Our amendment provides full marriage penalty relief in 2006 rather 
than requiring married taxpayers to endure further delay.
  Of all the tax breaks that Congress considers important, this should 
be among the first deserving action. It is relatively inexpensive. It 
will have the strongest economic stimulus effect. It will improve the 
fairness of the Tax Code.
  The second fix proposed by this amendment is to ensure that the 
families of our men and women in combat are not deprived of their tax 
benefits. In the midst of war, are we really going to tell our troops 
that their combat pay doesn't count as earned income for purposes of 
calculating tax credits?
  That is hard to image. Our amendment extends the tax protection for 
combat pay through 2007. Our troops not only earn their combat pay, but 
they have also earned our respect. They deserve our commitment of 
support.
  The combined cost of these important fixes is about 2 percent of the 
cost of the tax reconciliation package and provides relief to our most 
needy taxpayers. Nevertheless, it is important that even this tax cut 
be deficit neutral. Congress has to make choices and set priorities and 
cannot get away with new spending or tax cuts that are not paid for. 
American families expect this country to pay for its priorities.
  To pay for relief from the marriage penalty and relief from the 
military service penalty, this amendment closes a tax loophole related 
to foreign entities by changing sale-in and lease-out provisions. This 
sensible change raises more than the cost of the important EITC fixes.
  Unlike the tax package as a whole, this amendment does not worsen the 
deficit, and it does not shift the burden from those in our society 
fortunate to have the most to those who have the least.
  Our amendment is fair. It is fiscally responsible. It is an example 
of the sort of tax policy adjustments that we ought to be focused on in 
reconciliation.
  I urge my colleagues to support fiscally responsible relief of the 
marriage penalty and military service penalty for low-income families, 
and I ask you to support this amendment.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on the 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, this amendment does not raise taxes. It 
does not require a new offset. What it does is provide for our combat 
troops who currently have the ability to take combat pay and make it 
count against the earned income tax credit. Believe it or not, there 
are troops who need that and use that. It expires at the end of this 
year. What this amendment does is continue it into 2007 through the end 
of 2007. Secondly, it does something else. It provides a more rapid 
relief of the marriage penalty which is now charged to people who get 
the earned income tax credit.
  Now, this was already passed under the 2001 tax legislation but will 
not go into effect until 2008. This is paid for by an offset we have 
already passed, and there is sufficient money in that offset to 
accelerate the marriage penalty reduction so that we reward parents 
with kids who work and we take away the marriage penalty and help our 
troops at the same time.
  I hope my colleagues will support it.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, the substance of the legislation is 
difficult to argue with, but this is an outlay, and you can't have 
outlays in this particular reconciliation bill. So I raise the point of 
order.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, pursuant to section 904 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I move to waive the applicable 
sections thereof for purposes of this amendment.
  We already have the yeas and nays.
  I ask for the yeas and nays with respect to the motion to waive.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion. The clerk will call the 
roll.
  The bill clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 55, nays 43, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 344 Leg.]

                                YEAS--55

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chafee
     Clinton
     Coleman
     Collins
     Conrad
     Dayton
     DeWine
     Dodd
     Dole
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Hutchison
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     McCain
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Talent
     Wyden

                                NAYS--43

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 55, the nays are 
43. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn, not having 
voted in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.

[[Page 27047]]

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.


                           Amendment No. 2629

  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, I call up amendment 2629 and ask for its 
immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Minnesota [Mr. Dayton] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2629.

  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading 
of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To allow a refundable tax credit for the energy costs of 
   farmers and ranchers, and to modify the foreign tax credit rules 
                 applicable to dual capacity taxpayers)

       On page 235, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following:

     SEC. __. REFUNDABLE TAX CREDIT FOR ENERGY COST ASSISTANCE OF 
                   FARMERS AND RANCHERS.

       (a) In General.--Subpart C of part IV of subchapter A of 
     chapter 1 (relating to refundable credits) is amended by 
     redesignating section 36 as section 37 and by inserting after 
     section 35 the following new section:

     ``SEC. 36. CREDIT FOR ENERGY COST ASSISTANCE FOR FARMERS AND 
                   RANCHERS.

       ``(a) General Rule.--In the case of an eligible taxpayer, 
     there shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by 
     this subtitle for the taxable year an amount equal to the 
     lesser of--
       ``(1) 30 percent of the amount paid or incurred for 
     qualified energy costs, or
       ``(2) $3,000.
       ``(b) Eligible Taxpayer.--For purposes of this section, the 
     term `eligible taxpayer' means any individual engaged in a 
     farming business (as defined in section 263A(e)(4)).
       ``(c) Residential Energy Costs.--For purposes of this 
     section, the term `qualified energy costs' means the cost of 
     any fuel, energy utility, natural gas, fertilizer, and 
     heating oil used in the farming business of the taxpayer 
     during the taxable year.
       ``(d) Termination.--This section shall not apply to 
     qualified energy costs paid or incurred after December 31, 
     2005.''.
       (b) No Double Benefit.--Section 280C is amended by adding 
     at the end the following new subsection:
       ``(e) Energy Assistance for Farmers and Ranchers.--No 
     deduction shall be allowed for that portion of the expenses 
     otherwise allowable as a deduction for the taxable year which 
     is equal to the amount of the credit determined under section 
     36(a).''.
       (c) Refundability.--Section 1324(b)(2) of title 31, United 
     States Code, is amended by striking ``or'' before ``enacted'' 
     and by inserting before the period at the end ``, or from 
     section 36 of such Code''.
       (d) Clerical Amendments.--The table of sections for subpart 
     C of part IV of subchapter A of chapter 1 is amended by 
     striking the item relating to section 35 and by adding at the 
     end the following new items:

``Sec. 36. Credit for energy cost assistance for farmers and ranchers.
``Sec. 37. Overpayments of tax.''.

       (e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2004.

     SEC. ___. MODIFICATIONS OF FOREIGN TAX CREDIT RULES 
                   APPLICABLE TO DUAL CAPACITY TAXPAYERS.

       (a) In General.--Section 901 (relating to credit for taxes 
     of foreign countries and of possessions of the United States) 
     is amended by redesignating subsection (m) as subsection (n) 
     and by inserting after subsection (l) the following new 
     subsection:
       ``(m) Special Rules Relating To Dual Capacity Taxpayers.--
       ``(1) General rule.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
     this chapter, any amount paid or accrued by a dual capacity 
     taxpayer to a foreign country or possession of the United 
     States for any period shall not be considered a tax--
       ``(A) if, for such period, the foreign country or 
     possession does not impose a generally applicable income tax, 
     or
       ``(B) to the extent such amount exceeds the amount 
     (determined in accordance with regulations) which--
       ``(i) is paid by such dual capacity taxpayer pursuant to 
     the generally applicable income tax imposed by the country or 
     possession, or
       ``(ii) would be paid if the generally applicable income tax 
     imposed by the country or possession were applicable to such 
     dual capacity taxpayer.

     Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to imply the 
     proper treatment of any such amount not in excess of the 
     amount determined under subparagraph (B).
       ``(2) Dual capacity taxpayer.--For purposes of this 
     subsection, the term `dual capacity taxpayer' means, with 
     respect to any foreign country or possession of the United 
     States, a person who--
       ``(A) is subject to a levy of such country or possession, 
     and
       ``(B) receives (or will receive) directly or indirectly a 
     specific economic benefit (as determined in accordance with 
     regulations) from such country or possession.
       ``(3) Generally applicable income tax.--For purposes of 
     this subsection--
       ``(A) In general.--The term `generally applicable income 
     tax' means an income tax (or a series of income taxes) which 
     is generally imposed under the laws of a foreign country or 
     possession on income derived from the conduct of a trade or 
     business within such country or possession.
       ``(B) Exceptions.--Such term shall not include a tax unless 
     it has substantial application, by its terms and in practice, 
     to--
       ``(i) persons who are not dual capacity taxpayers, and
       ``(ii) persons who are citizens or residents of the foreign 
     country or possession.''
       (b) Effective Date.--
       (1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall 
     apply to taxes paid or accrued in taxable years beginning 
     after the date of the enactment of this Act.
       (2) Contrary treaty obligations upheld.--The amendments 
     made by this section shall not apply to the extent contrary 
     to any treaty obligation of the United States.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota is recognized.
  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, this amendment would provide a Federal tax 
credit to farmers for 30 percent of their 2005 energy costs up to 
$3,000 per farmer. Qualified energy costs are those for fuels, 
utilities, fertilizers, heating and drying used in farming businesses 
of taxpayers during calendar year 2005.
  As my colleagues know, farmers have been especially hard hit by 
soaring energy prices. In addition to skyrocketing energy costs, many 
farmers have been hit with higher transportation costs. In the 
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, American farmers desperately need 
relief.
  The estimated $3 billion cost of this measure is more than offset by 
closing the tax loophole that gives a foreign oil and gas income tax 
credit for oil companies that provides $4.1 billion over 5 years.
  I ask for the yeas and nays.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this is one of those amendments we have 
dealt with four or five times. It is a tax on consumers by raising the 
price of gasoline. It may be used for a good purpose, but it affects 
the germaneness. I raise a point of order on germaneness. I ask my 
colleagues to vote against the amendment.
  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, I move to waive the Budget Act with 
respect to my amendment, and I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion. The clerk will call the 
roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 47, nays 51, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 345 Leg.]

                                YEAS--47

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Burns
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Clinton
     Coleman
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Talent
     Wyden

                                NAYS--51

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burr
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens

[[Page 27048]]


     Sununu
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 47 and the nays are 
51. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained, and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Iowa.


                           Amendment No. 2665

  Mr. HARKIN. I send amendment No. 2665 to the desk and ask for its 
immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Iowa [Mr. Harkin], for himself and Mr. 
     Obama, proposes an amendment numbered 2665.

  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading 
of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to restore the 
phaseout of personal exemptions and the overall limitation on itemized 
  deductions and to modify the income threshold used to calculate the 
              refundable portion of the child tax credit)

       At the end of title IV, add the following:

     SEC. ___. RESTORATION OF THE PHASEOUT OF PERSONAL EXEMPTIONS 
                   AND THE OVERALL LIMITATION ON ITEMIZED 
                   DEDUCTION; REDUCTION IN INCOME THRESHOLD USED 
                   TO CALCULATE REFUNDABLE PORTION OF CHILD TAX 
                   CREDIT.

       (a) Restoration of the Phaseout of Personal Exemptions and 
     the Overall Limitation on Itemized Deductions.--
       (1) Restoration of phaseout of personal exemptions.--
       (A) In general.--Paragraph (3) of section 151(d) (relating 
     to exemption amount) is amended by striking subparagraphs (E) 
     and (F).
       (B) Effective date.--The amendment made by this paragraph 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       (2) Restoration of phaseout of overall limitation on 
     itemized deductions.--
       (A) In general.--Section 68 is amended by striking 
     subsections (f) and (g).
       (B) Effective date.--The amendment made by this paragraph 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       (b) Reduction in Income Threshold Used To Calculate 
     Refundable Portion of Child Tax Credit.--
       (1) In general.--Section 24(d) (relating to portion of 
     credit refundable) is amended--
       (A) by striking ``as exceeds'' and all that follows through 
     ``, or'' in paragraph (1)(B)(i) and inserting ``as exceeds 
     $9,000 (or $10,000 in the case of taxable years beginning in 
     2006), or'',
       (B) by striking ``2001, the $10,000 amount'' in paragraph 
     (3) and inserting ``2006, the $9,000 amount'', and
       (C) by striking ``2000'' in paragraph (3)(B) and inserting 
     ``2005''.
       (2) Effective date.--The amendments made by this subsection 
     shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
     2005.
       (3) Application of sunset to this section.--Each amendment 
     made by this subsection shall be subject to title IX of the 
     Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 to 
     the same extent and in the same manner as the provision of 
     such Act to which such amendment relates.

  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, this amendment does three things. One, it 
stops next year's scheduled phaseout of the so-called PEP and Pease 
provisions, a phaseout that would cost the Treasury $29 billion in the 
first 5 years and explodes to $146 billion in 10 years after that. Over 
half of this money goes to people making over $1 million a year.
  What I would do with that is reduce the deficit by $146 billion over 
that decade and, secondly, to increase the additional child care 
credit, making over 600,000 working families eligible and raising the 
amount that over 6 million families get for the additional child care 
credit. These are people who are making around the minimum wage.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, this is another way of cutting back on 
the mortgage deduction, the charitable deduction, and the State and 
local tax deduction. When these provisions of phaseout of deductions 
were put in years ago, it was subterfuge for raising the marginal tax 
rate without raising the marginal tax rate.
  From Iowa, we are very transparent. If one wants to raise the 
marginal tax rate, raise the marginal tax rate but do not do it by 
subterfuge. Besides, this amendment is not germane. I raise a point of 
germaneness.
  Mr. HARKIN. Pursuant to section 904 of the Budget Act, I move to 
waive the point of order and ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The question is on agreeing to the motion.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senator was necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 42, nays 56, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 346 Leg.]

                                YEAS--42

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Byrd
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Clinton
     Conrad
     Dayton
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Johnson
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (FL)
     Obama
     Pryor
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Salazar
     Sarbanes
     Schumer
     Stabenow
     Wyden

                                NAYS--56

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Burr
     Chafee
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Craig
     Crapo
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Kyl
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (NE)
     Roberts
     Santorum
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Warner

                             NOT VOTING--2

     Corzine
     Lott
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 42, the nays are 
56. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted 
in the affirmative, the motion is rejected. The point of order is 
sustained and the amendment falls.
  The Senator from Iowa is recognized.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I have a request for 2 Members to change 
the order of authorship of amendments, so I ask unanimous consent that 
the previously agreed amendment No. 2645 should be listed as Coleman 
and Pryor, instead of Pryor and Coleman.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 2658

  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2658 and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant journal clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Minnesota [Mr. Dayton] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2658.

  Mr. DAYTON. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill add the following:

     SECTION 1. VALUATION OF EMPLOYEE PERSONAL USE OF 
                   NONCOMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT.

       (a) In General.--For purposes of Federal income tax 
     inclusion, the value of any employee personal use of 
     noncommercial aircraft shall equal the excess (if any) of--
       (1) greater of--
       (A) the fair market value of such use, or
       (B) the actual cost of such use (including all fixed and 
     variable costs), over
       (2) any amount paid by or on behalf of such employee for 
     such use.
       (b) Effective Date.--Subsection (a) shall apply to use 
     after the date of the enactment of this Act.

  Mr. DAYTON. Mr. President, this amendment raises money. It does so by

[[Page 27049]]

ending tax avoidance by high-paid corporate executives through their 
personal use of company airplanes. A recent Wall Street Journal article 
described the exorbitant uses of corporate jets for personal 
recreation, largely untaxed, that costs company shareholders and other 
taxpayers millions of dollars per year. One CEO made eight weekend 
roundtrips from his Pittsburgh office to his $5 million home in Naples, 
FL, where he played golf at his exclusive private club. If the 
directors and shareholders of that company want to provide that 
personal luxury perk to an executive already paid $4 million a year, I 
guess that is their business. But these executives should pay taxes on 
what are clearly personal benefits, and they should pay taxes on the 
actual values of those benefits, not on some artificially low fictional 
cost.
  Working men and women have to value their benefits properly for tax 
purposes or they get penalized if they do not. Certainly, the 
wealthiest people in America should also have to value their luxury 
perks properly. My amendment would raise $95 million over 10 years, 
according to the Joint Committee on Taxation, and will also reduce a 
truly outrageous and self-indulgent practice.
  I ask for the yeas and nays. I will accept a voice vote.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I ask unanimous consent we accept this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 2658) was agreed to.
  Mr. DAYTON. I thank the chairman from Iowa. It was my going-away 
present. It must be my going-away present.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who seeks recognition? The Senator from 
Montana.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I anticipate that Senator Landrieu is 
ready to offer her amendment. I suggest she be recognized.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.


                           Amendment No. 2669

  Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to send 
amendment No. 2020 to the desk, on behalf of myself and my colleague, 
Senator Vitter.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a minute?
  Ms. LANDRIEU. Yes, I would.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. As modified?
  Ms. LANDRIEU. As modified.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. The modified amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Louisiana [Ms. Landrieu], for herself and 
     Mr. Vitter, proposes an amendment numbered 2669.

  Ms. LANDRIEU. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment No. 2669 as modified is as follows:

    (Purpose: To provide housing relief for individuals affected by 
                           Hurricane Katrina)

       On page 35, between lines 16 and 17, insert the following:

     SEC. 104. HOUSING RELIEF FOR INDIVIDUALS AFFECTED BY 
                   HURRICANE KATRINA.

       (a) Exclusion of Employer Provided Housing for Individual 
     Affected by Hurricane Katrina.--
       (1) In general.--For purposes of the Internal Revenue Code 
     of 1986, gross income of a qualified employee shall not 
     include the value of any lodging furnished to such employee, 
     such employee's spouse, or any of such employee's dependents 
     by or on behalf of a qualified employer for any month during 
     the taxable year.
       (2) Limitation.--The amount which may be excluded under 
     subsection (a) for any month for which lodging is furnished 
     during the taxable year shall not exceed $600.
       (3) Treatment of exclusion.--For purposes of the Internal 
     Revenue Code of 1986 (other than sections 3121(a)(19) and 
     3306(b)(14), an exclusion under subsection (a) shall be 
     treated as an exclusion under section 119 of such Code.
       (b) Employer Credit for Housing Employees Affected by 
     Hurricane Katrina.--
       (1) In general.--In the case of a qualified employer, there 
     shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by 
     chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 for any month 
     during the taxable year an amount equal to 30 percent of any 
     amount which is excludable from the gross income of a 
     qualified employee of such employer under subsection (a).
       (2) Certain rules to apply.--For purposes of this section, 
     rules similar to the rules of section 280C(a) of such Code 
     shall apply.
       (3) Credit to be part of general business credit.--The 
     credit allowed under this section shall be added to the 
     current year business credit under section 38(b) of such Code 
     and shall be treated as a credit allowed under subpart D of 
     part IV of subchapter A of such Code.
       (c) Qualified Employee.--For purposes of this section, the 
     term ``qualified employee'' means, with respect to any month, 
     an individual--
       (1) who had a principal residence (as defined in section 
     121 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986) in the Go Zone (as 
     defined in section 1400N(1) of such Code) on August 28, 2005, 
     and
       (2) who performs not less than 80 percent of the employment 
     services for a qualified employer in the Hurricane Katrina 
     disaster area (as so defined).
       (d) Qualified Employer.--For purposes of this section, the 
     term ``qualified employer'' means any employer with a trade 
     or business located in the Hurricane Katrina disaster area 
     (as so defined).
       (e) Application of Section.--This section shall apply to 
     lodging provided--
       (1) after the date of the enactment of this Act, and
       (2) before the date which is 6 months after the date of the 
     enactment of this Act.
       (3) no credit with respect to such lodging shall be claimed 
     before October 1, 2006.

  Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, this amendment would provide a very 
special and temporary tax relief to employers in the region of the 
hurricane that was hit so badly, to try to help them get their 
employees back to work by providing temporary housing and giving them a 
tax credit to do so. We are having a very serious housing crisis, as 
you all have been reading, and you have been trying to help us with 
that. This would go a long way. I thank you for your consideration 
tonight.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I ask unanimous consent that we accept the amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 2669) was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Idaho.


                           Amendment No. 2655

  Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2655 and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant journal clerk read as follows:

       The Senator form Idaho [Mr. Craig], for himself and Mr. 
     Rockefeller, proposes an amendment numbered 2655.

  Mr. CRAIG. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To express the sense of the Congress regarding the conditions 
    for the United States to become a signatory to any multilateral 
 agreement on trade resulting from the World Trade Organization's Doha 
                       Development Agenda Round)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

     SEC. __. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING DOHA ROUND.

       (a) Findings.--The Congress makes the following findings:
       (1) Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are 
     currently engaged in a round of trade negotiations known as 
     the Doha Development Agenda (Doha Round).
       (2) The Doha Round includes negotiations aimed at 
     clarifying and improving disciplines under the Agreement on 
     Implementation of Article VI of the General Agreement on 
     Tariffs and Trade 1994 (Antidumping Agreement) and the 
     Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (Subsidies 
     Agreement).
       (3) The WTO Ministerial Declaration adopted on November 14, 
     2001 (WTO Paper No. WT/MIN(01)/DEC/1) specifically provides 
     that the Doha Round negotiations are to preserve the ``basic 
     concepts, principles and effectiveness'' of the Antidumping 
     Agreement and the Subsidies Agreement.
       (4) In section 2102(b)(14)(A) of the Bipartisan Trade 
     Promotion Authority Act of 2002, the Congress mandated that 
     the principal negotiating objective of the United States with 
     respect to trade remedy laws was to ``preserve the ability of 
     the United States to enforce rigorously its trade laws . . . 
     and avoid agreements that lessen the effectiveness of 
     domestic and international disciplines on unfair trade, 
     especially dumping and subsidies''.
       (5) The countries that have been the most persistent and 
     egregious violators of international fair trade rules are 
     engaged in an

[[Page 27050]]

     aggressive effort to significantly weaken the disciplines 
     provided in the Antidumping Agreement and the Subsidies 
     Agreement and undermine the ability of the United States to 
     effectively enforce its trade remedy laws.
       (6) Chronic violators of fair trade disciplines have put 
     forward proposals that would substantially weaken United 
     States trade remedy laws and practices, including mandating 
     that unfair trade orders terminate after a set number of 
     years even if unfair trade and injury are likely to recur, 
     mandating that trade remedy duties reflect less than the full 
     margin of dumping or subsidization, mandating higher de 
     minimis levels of unfair trade, making cumulation of the 
     effects of imports from multiple countries more difficult in 
     unfair trade investigations, outlawing the critical practice 
     of ``zeroing'' in antidumping investigations, mandating the 
     weighing of causes, and mandating other provisions that make 
     it more difficult to prove injury.
       (7) United States trade remedy laws have already been 
     significantly weakened by numerous unjust and activist WTO 
     dispute settlement decisions which have created new 
     obligations to which the United States never agreed.
       (8) Trade remedy laws remain a critical resource for 
     American manufacturers, agricultural producers, and 
     aquacultural producers in responding to closed foreign 
     markets, subsidized imports, and other forms of unfair trade, 
     particularly in the context of the challenges currently faced 
     by these vital sectors of the United States economy.
       (9) The United States had a current account trade deficit 
     of approximately $668,000,000,000 in 2004, including a trade 
     deficit of almost $162,000,000,000 with China alone, as well 
     as a trade deficit of $40,000,000,000 in advanced technology.
       (10) United States manufacturers have lost over 3,000,000 
     jobs since June 2000, and United States manufacturing 
     employment is currently at its lowest level since 1950.
       (11) Many industries critical to United States national 
     security are at severe risk from unfair foreign competition.
       (12) The Congress strongly believes that the proposals put 
     forward by countries seeking to undermine trade remedy 
     disciplines in the Doha Round would result in serious harm to 
     the United States economy, including significant job losses 
     and trade disadvantages.
       (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
       (1) the United States should not be a signatory to any 
     agreement or protocol with respect to the Doha Development 
     Round of the World Trade Organization negotiations, or any 
     other bilateral or multilateral trade negotiations, that--
       (A) adopts any proposal to lessen the effectiveness of 
     domestic and international disciplines on unfair trade or 
     safeguard provisions, including proposals--
       (i) mandating that unfair trade orders terminate after a 
     set number of years even if unfair trade and injury are 
     likely to recur;
       (ii) mandating that trade remedy duties reflect less than 
     the full margin of dumping or subsidization;
       (iii) mandating higher de minimis levels of unfair trade;
       (iv) making cumulation of the effects of imports from 
     multiple countries more difficult in unfair trade 
     investigations;
       (v) outlawing the critical practice of ``zeroing'' in 
     antidumping investigations; or
       (vi) mandating the weighing of causes or other provisions 
     making it more difficult to prove injury in unfair trade 
     cases; and
       (B) would lessen in any manner the ability of the United 
     States to enforce rigorously its trade laws, including the 
     antidumping, countervailing duty, and safeguard laws;
       (2) the United States trade laws and international rules 
     appropriately serve the public interest by offsetting 
     injurious unfair trade, and that further ``balancing 
     modifications'' or other similar provisions are unnecessary 
     and would add to the complexity and difficulty of achieving 
     relief against injurious unfair trade practices; and
       (3) the United States should ensure that any new agreement 
     relating to international disciplines on unfair trade or 
     safeguard provisions fully rectifies and corrects decisions 
     by WTO dispute settlement panels or the Appellate Body that 
     have unjustifiably and negatively impacted, or threaten to 
     negatively impact, United States law or practice, including a 
     law or practice with respect to foreign dumping or 
     subsidization.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Idaho.
  Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, I ask my colleagues to join Senator 
Rockefeller and myself tonight in speaking clearly to our negotiators 
as they head for the Doha Round in Hong Kong in December.
  Congress has made it clear time and time again that U.S. negotiators 
cannot bring back a trade agreement from the Doha that weakens U.S. 
antidumping and countervailing duty and safeguard laws that this 
Congress has put in place. These laws are widely recognized as critical 
tools to U.S. manufacturers, farmers, ranchers, and workers who 
sometimes are forced to fight for their rights to compete in fair 
environments.
  As we open up the world's trade, let us make sure that we have in 
place the tools necessary to keep it fair and balanced, and not 
negotiated away by our negotiations.
  It is a sense-of-the-Senate resolution with that instruction in mind.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I yield my 1 minute.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Burr). All time has expired.
  The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2655) was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine.


                           Amendment No. 2667

  Ms. SNOWE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2667 that was filed 
earlier, along with Senators Bingaman, Collins, and Reid.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
  The Senator from Maine [Ms. Snowe], for herself, Mr. Bingaman, Ms. 
Collins, and Mr. Reid, proposes an amendment numbered 2667.
  Ms. SNOWE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of the 
amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To impose withholding on certain payments made by government 
 entities and to use the revenues collected to fund programs under the 
  Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981 through a trust fund)

       At the end of title IV add the following:

     SEC. __. IMPOSITION OF WITHHOLDING ON CERTAIN PAYMENTS MADE 
                   BY GOVERNMENT ENTITIES AND FUNDING OF LIHEAP 
                   TRUST FUND.

       (a) Imposition of Withholding on Certain Payments Made by 
     Government Entities.--
       (1) In general.--Section 3402 is amended by adding at the 
     end the following new subsection:
       ``(t) Extension of Withholding to Certain Payments Made by 
     Government Entities.--
       ``(1) General rule.--The Government of the United States, 
     every State, every political subdivision thereof, and every 
     instrumentality of the foregoing (including multi-State 
     agencies) making any payment for goods and services which is 
     subject to withholding shall deduct and withhold form such 
     payment a tax in an amount equal to 1.75 percent of such 
     payment.
       ``(2) Exceptions.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any 
     payment--
       ``(A) except as provided in subparagraph (B), which is 
     subject to withholding under any other provision of this 
     chapter or chapter 3,
       ``(B) which is subject to withholding under section 3406 
     and from which amounts are being withheld under such section,
       ``(C) of interest,
       ``(D) for real property,
       ``(E) to any tax-exempt entity, foreign government, or 
     other entity subject to the requirements of paragraph (1),
       ``(F) made pursuant to a classified or confidential 
     contract (as defined in section 6050M(e)(3)), and
       ``(G) made by a political subdivision of a State (or any 
     instrumentality thereof) which makes less than $100,000,000 
     of such payments annually.
       ``(3) Coordination with other sections.--For purposes of 
     sections 3403 and 3404 and for purposes of so much of 
     subtitle F (except section 7205) as relates to this chapter, 
     payments to any person of any payment for goods and services 
     which is subject to withholding shall be treated as if such 
     payments were wages paid by an employer to an employee.''.
       (2) Effective date.--The amendment made by this subsection 
     shall apply to payments made after December 31, 2005.
       (b) Low Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund.--
       (1) In general.--Subchapter A of chapter 98 (relating to 
     trust fund code) is amended by adding at the end the 
     following new section:

     ``SEC. 9511. LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY ASSISTANCE TRUST FUND.

       ``(a) Creation of Trust Fund.--There is established in the 
     Treasury of the United States a trust fund to be known as the 
     `Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund', consisting of 
     any amount appropriated or credited to the Trust Fund as 
     provided in this section or section 9602(b).
       ``(b) Transfers to Trust Fund.--There are hereby 
     appropriated to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust 
     Fund amounts equivalent to the increased revenues received in 
     the Treasury as the result of the amendment made by section 
     410(a) of the Tax Relief Act of 2005.
       ``(c) Expenditures From Trust Fund.--Amounts in the Low 
     Income Home Energy

[[Page 27051]]

     Assistance Trust Fund not to exceed $2,920,000,000 shall be 
     available for fiscal year 2006, as provided by appropriation 
     Acts, to carry out the program under the Low-Income Home 
     Energy Assistance Act of 1981 through the distribution of 
     funds to all the States in accordance with section 2604 of 
     that Act (42 U.S.C. 8623) (other than subsection (e) of such 
     section), but only if not less than $1,880,000,000 has been 
     appropriated for such program for such fiscal year.''.
       (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections for such 
     subchapter is amended by adding at the end the following new 
     item:

``Sec. 9511. Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Trust Fund.''.

       (c) Effective Dates.--
       (1) In general.--The amendments made by subsection (a) 
     shall take effect as if included in the enactment of the 
     American Jobs Creation Act of 2004.
       (2) Subsection (b).--The amendments made by subsection (b) 
     shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.

  Ms. SNOWE. Mr. President, for months we have seen escalating 
petroleum and natural gas prices, magnified by the effects of three 
hurricanes. Now with the onset of winter, home heating oil prices are 
predicted to increase 44 percent in Maine, while natural gas is 
predicted to be 41 percent higher nationwide. My colleagues and I have 
called for LIHEAP funding increases for months on each spending bill. 
This amendment here may be our last chance this year to keep our 
seniors and disadvantaged from choosing between eating and heating. No 
American should face this choice.
  My amendment would add $2.92 billion in LIHEAP funding, bringing it 
up to the fully authorized level. It is fully offset. The offset 
addresses a longstanding problem: government contractors aren't paying 
taxes. It requires government agencies to withhold income tax for the 
employees of government contractors at a rate of 1.75 percent when they 
purchase goods and services from government contractors.
  There should be no mistake--this is an emergency and a crisis we know 
is coming, and it would be an abrogation of our responsibility to stand 
by and allow it to occur. It does not take a crystal ball to predict 
the dire consequences when home heating oil in Maine is $2.45 per 
gallon, up 38 cents from a year ago, and kerosene prices average $2.75 
a gallon, 51 cents higher than this time last year and it's not even 
winter yet.
  This is a necessity of life--so much so that 73 percent of households 
in a recent survey reported they would cut back on, and even go 
without, other necessities such as food, prescription drugs, and 
mortgage and rent payments. The facts are that LIHEAP is projected to 
help 5 million households nationwide this winter.
  On November 4, a representative of the Senior Companion Program 
called my Bangor Office to say that they already had to admit an 
elderly client into the hospital due to hypothermia, because she 
couldn't afford enough heating oil. And, it is only the beginning of 
November. This simply should not be allowed to happen again.
  Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, this amendment would express the sense of 
the Senate that any increases in revenues to the Treasury as a result 
of this act, above the amounts specified in the reconciliation 
instructions, shall be dedicated to the Low-Income Home Energy 
Assistance Program, also known as LIHEAP, up to the fully authorized 
amount.
  Just a few months ago, the President signed into law the Energy 
Policy Act of 2005. This law, which passed the Senate overwhelmingly, 
authorizes $5.1 billion for the LIHEAP program for Fiscal Year 2006. 
Unfortunately, even though Chairman Specter worked very hard to 
increase funding in the Labor-HHS bill, that bill only provides $2.2 
billion in LIHEAP funding but $2.2 billion is not nearly enough. The 
amendment I am offering today expresses the sense of the Senate that up 
to an additional $2.9 billion in excess revenues should be made 
available to the LIHEAP program.
  Our Nation was struck by three extremely powerful hurricanes. While 
these hurricanes were devastating to the people of Florida and the gulf 
coast, they have also had a major impact on the rest of the Nation. 
Just as the Nation should be building oil supplies for the winter 
heating season, these hurricanes have disrupted our already strained 
supplies and sent both heating oil and gasoline prices to painfully 
high levels.
  While high energy prices have been challenging for almost all 
Americans, they impose an especially difficult burden on low-income 
families and on the elderly living on limited incomes. Low-income 
families spend a greater percentage of their incomes on energy and have 
fewer options available when energy prices soar. High energy prices can 
even cause families to choose between keeping the heat on, putting food 
on the table, or paying for much-needed prescription medicine. These 
are choices that no American family should ever have to make.
  We need more LIHEAP funding this year. Let me describe the situation 
that we are facing in my home state. While the official start of winter 
is still 2 months away, temperatures have already fallen below freezing 
in much of Maine. In Maine, 78 percent of households use home heating 
oil to heat their homes. Currently, the cost of home heating oil is 
roughly $2.34 per gallon, $0.38 above last year's already inflated 
prices. These high prices greatly increase the need for assistance, and 
at least 3,000 additional Mainers are expected to apply for LIHEAP 
funding this year. With more people in need of assistance, the benefit 
is expected to fall by roughly 10 percent to $440 per qualifying 
household. Unfortunately, at today's high prices, $440 is only enough 
to purchase 188 gallons of oil--far below last year's equivalent 
benefit of 251 gallons and not nearly enough to get through even a 
small portion of a Maine winter. With rising prices and falling 
benefits, we have a problem. Just to purchase the same amount of oil 
this year as last year, Maine would need an additional $10 million in 
LIHEAP funds.
  The bill before us is still a work in progress, and at this point it 
is impossible to know whether the final bill that we pass shall provide 
any increases in revenues to the Treasury beyond the amounts specified 
in the reconciliation instructions. I would note that Senator Wyden 
offered an amendment in committee that eliminates an unnecessary tax 
subsidy for major oil and gas companies. This subsidy is worth hundreds 
of millions of dollars. I believe we should eliminate even more 
unnecessary subsidies for oil gas companies. Regardless, I believe that 
should this act result in any increase in revenues to the Treasury 
beyond the reconciliation instructions, those revenues should go to the 
LIHEAP program, up to the fully authorized amount.
  With winter fast approaching and energy prices soaring, home heating 
bills are set to pound family budgets mercilessly. For low income 
families, LIHEAP funds can be the factor that prevents families from 
having to choose between turning off the heat or putting food on the 
table. I call on my colleagues to support this amendment expressing the 
sense of the Senate that we should fully fund the LIHEAP program.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask my colleagues to vote against this 
amendment. I am not going to raise a point of order.
  I ask for a voice vote.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2667) was rejected.


                           amendment no. 2670

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I send to the desk the managers' 
amendment.
  Traditionally, managers' amendments have been worked out with both 
sides of the aisle.
  I urge adoption of the amendment.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, today I filed an amendment to the Tax 
Relief Act of 2005, S. 2020, to provide additional relief for taxpayers 
from the individual alternative minimum tax by truly holding harmless 
all taxpayers not currently impacted by the AMT. Senator Wyden is a 
cosponsor of this amendment.
  This afternoon, the managers of the S. 2020, Senators Grassley and 
Baucus, crafted a managers' amendment

[[Page 27052]]

including identical language to our amendment, and that managers' 
amendment was accepted by unanimous consent and is now part of the 
legislation that will pass the Senate.
  I think we misname this tax when we call it the alternative minimum 
tax. We should call it the family tax, for the simple reason that most 
taxpayers get hit by the AMT because of where they live and because 
they have children.
  We can call it the AMT or any other innocuous name we like here on 
Capitol Hill or at the IRS, but in practice it is a tax on children--it 
is the family tax. If you live in a certain State, and you don't want 
to pay this family tax, about the only thing you can do is to not start 
a family. We are literally punishing Americans for having children and 
building families.
  In May, we heard testimony from the Urban Institute about how the AMT 
was once a ``class tax'' but will soon become a ``mass tax'' because 
more and more taxpayers--mostly because they want children--will be 
forced to pay the AMT.
  Nina Olson, the National Taxpayer Advocate who works every day on the 
practical implications of what we do here, has repeatedly testified 
about the complexities and the inequities of the AMT. She said 
sarcastically that the AMT ``penalizes taxpayers for such classic tax 
avoidance behavior as having children or living in a high-tax state.''
  If you look at the history of the AMT, you can see that it badly 
needs reform.
  The individual AMT was created in 1969 to address the 155 individual 
taxpayers with incomes exceeding $200,000 who paid no Federal income 
tax in 1966. It applied to a tiny minority of households. But it is 
rapidly growing from those 155 taxpayers in 1969 to 1 million in 1999 
to almost 29 million by 2010. It now affects families with incomes well 
below $200,000. By the end of the decade, repealing the AMT will cost 
more than repealing the regular income tax.
  Unfortunately, we cannot end this family tax today, but we can do 
more than what is in the bill. When S. 2020 was first brought before 
the Senate it included a provision that would extend the current 
exemption level and indexes it for inflation. This provision seeks to 
``patch'' or ``hold harmless'' these middle-class taxpayers, but it is 
a patch with a hole in it. It does not cover all the moderate income 
individuals who are impacted by the family tax.
  The Kerry-Wyden amendment, and the enacted Grassley-Baucus amendment, 
would protect half a million more taxpayers from the family tax than 
the original bill. This amendment truly holds taxpayers harmless. The 
same amount of taxpayers that would be impacted by the AMT in 2005 will 
be impacted in 2006.
  This means 600,000 million taxpayers will be better off under the 
amendment. We should protect as many families as possible from the 
unfair family tax. And this amendment is paid for with an offset that 
has had bipartisan support and passed the Senate.
  The cost of our proposal is fully offset. First, it reforms the tax 
law that now applies to U.S. citizens living abroad, so the income tax 
exclusion would apply to both foreign income and foreign housing costs. 
Under current law, individuals get a tax credit for foreign taxes paid. 
This provision passed the Senate last year and was included in the 
Joint Committee on Taxation recommendation on ways to reduce the tax 
gap. Second, it would modify a provision in the underlying bill that 
makes modifications to the individual estimated tax-safe harbor to the 
appropriate percentage in 2006.
  The Senate should stop punishing taxpayers because of where they 
live, because they move from one State to another for work or school, 
or because they decide to start a family. Today we took a step in that 
direction. I am grateful to Senator Wyden for cosponsoring the 
amendment with me, and I am grateful that Senators Grassley and Baucus 
acted as well.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
  The amendment (No. 2670) was agreed to.
  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')


                         combating tax shelters

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I am offering this amendment with my 
colleague, Senator Coleman. I understand portions of our amendment have 
been cleared by both sides of the aisle and will be included.
  I thank Senators Grassley and Baucus for accepting this toughening of 
the penalties on those who promote abusive tax shelters or aid and abet 
tax evasion. Senators Grassley and Baucus have been battling abusive 
tax shelters for years now, and it is a privilege to have had them as 
allies in this fight.
  Tax dodging costs the Government between $300 and $350 billion every 
year. A significant portion of this ``tax gap'' results from abusive 
tax shelters and tax havens. Mr. President, $350 billion is more than 
the Government spends on Medicare annually and is close to the size of 
this year's deficit.
  For 3 years, we have had an indepth subcommittee investigation into 
abusive tax shelters developed, marketed, and carried out by accounting 
firms, banks, investment advisors, and lawyers. We found that tax 
advisors cooked up one complex scheme after another, packaged them as 
generic ``tax products'' and then peddled the products to thousands of 
taxpayers across the country. This investigative work provides the 
foundation for our amendment today.
  Tax chiseling is undermining the integrity of our tax system. It 
hurts middle income Americans by forcing them to pay for more than 
their fair share and constricting resources for essential government 
programs.
  The Levin-Coleman provision that the managers have agreed to will 
increase penalties to 100 percent on persons who promote abusive tax 
shelters or knowingly aid or abet taxpayers to understate their tax 
liability. Currently, promoters face only a 50 percent penalty. Think 
about this. Why should anyone who illegally pushes an abusive tax 
shelter get to keep half of the profits?
  Even worse, the current penalty for those who knowingly aid and abet 
a taxpayer in understating its tax obligation face a maximum penalty of 
$1,000, or $10,000 for a corporation. But this penalty applies only to 
tax return preparers. It leaves out those who design, market and carry 
out the tax shelter, unless they also prepared the taxpayer's return. 
When law firms are getting $50,000 for each cookie-cutter opinion 
letter they issue, the possibility of a $10,000 penalty provides no 
deterrent whatsoever. That fine is like a jaywalking ticket for robbing 
a bank.
  I am pleased that today we have reached this agreement to toughen the 
current penalties, but I hope that eventually we can enact penalties 
that cause wrongdoers to not only disgorge their ill-gotten gains, but 
also pay a monetary fine on top of that. Doing so would be fair and 
would provide a meaningful deterrent.
  The Levin-Coleman amendment also prevented abusive tax shelters by 
getting banks out of the business and authorizing Federal agencies to 
share information to strengthen abusive tax shelter enforcement. I 
understand that Senator Grassley is willing to consider these 
provisions for inclusion in a future bill, and I look forward to 
working with the chairman and Senator Baucus and having our staffs work 
together on these issues.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Let me say that I agree with the amendment's purpose to 
combat abusive tax shelters. We need to eradicate the phony tax schemes 
that abuse our tax laws at the expense of honest taxpayers. I have 
worked hard to enact legislation to combat tax shelters by shutting 
them down and raising the penalties on those who promote and 
participate in those phony deals. This bill contains many more 
provisions that do just that. I will add to the bill the increased 
penalties on tax shelter promoters and on aiders and abettors, and I 
will support these provisions in conference. These provisions will help 
deter the activities of those who sell illegal tax schemes and those 
who help participants in these schemes.

[[Page 27053]]

  I share the Senator's desire to combat tax shelters, and I share his 
goals of deterring banks' participation in tax shelters and in 
exploring ways to let agencies work together to prevent tax shelter 
activity. However, I think that your amendment has some technical 
matters that I would like my staff to work through with your staff for 
future consideration. Combating tax shelters is a constant battle that 
we will continue to fight.
  Mr. BAUCUS. I share Chairman Grassley's views with respect to curbing 
abusive tax shelters, and I look forward to working with Senators Levin 
and Coleman to shut down these abusive transactions.


                              excise taxes

  Mr. HATCH. Will the distinguished Chair of the Senate Finance 
Committee, Senator Grassley, yield for a brief question?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. I will be glad to yield to the Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. The provisions of S. 2020 concerning excise taxes to be 
levied on transfers of insurance products are of some interest to me. 
It is clear that there are abuses in the system, and I am appreciative 
of the chairman and his staff for their substantial work to address 
those problems.
  It is my concern that the proposed excise tax language is so broadly 
drawn that it will stop what I believe are legitimate transactions that 
constitute best practice in this area. I am aware of a commercial loan 
structure that relies upon a valid insurable interest between donors 
and charities, where the lender has isolated both donors and charities 
from all lending risks.
  Further, there is an agreeable known benefit to the charity at loan 
inception, which is not reliant upon the payment of an insurance death 
benefit, and the loan structure does not include outside investors. The 
loan is never recharacterized from inception to payoff as anything but 
a loan.
  Is it the intent of the chairman in this provision to shut down a 
straightforward loan transaction?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. No, it is my intention that the provision should not 
affect the ability of charities to borrow to purchase life insurance, 
particularly where the people insured are officers, directors, 
employees or in some cases established donors of the charity that 
benefits.
  Mr. HATCH. Does the chairman believe there is room for further 
discussion in this area?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Yes.
  Mr. HATCH. Because of the tight timeframe for action, we were not 
able to work out language prior to bringing the bill to the floor. 
Would the chairman be able to give his assurances that he is 
sympathetic to my constituents' concerns and that he will work to 
address them in a managers' amendment or in conference?
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Yes.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I rise to engage my colleague, Senator 
Sala-
zar, in a colloquy regarding the technical changes adopted in the 
manager's amendment to the reconciliation bill. We have worked hard to 
address unintended consequences relating to changes made to treatment 
of Type III organizations. This is very important because there are 
many fine organizations that support noble and much needed causes. I 
have some of these organizations in my State of Colorado, including one 
generously supported by the Reisher family.
  Mr. SALAZAR. I am happy to engage with my distinguished colleague 
about the intent of this modification. And I, too, am glad that we were 
able to make these modifications and create a special rule for certain 
holdings of Type III organizations.
  Mr. ALLARD. Specifically, I am referring to the amendments providing 
for the special rule for certain holdings of Type III supporting 
organizations if the holdings are held for the benefit of the community 
pursuant to the direction of a State attorney general or a State 
official with jurisdiction over the Type III supporting organization. 
As some of us with interest in this provision worked to address 
unintended consequences, we thought it would be a good idea to have the 
AG or State official direction needed to ensure that the abuses that 
concerned the chairman would be addressed. As State officials issue 
this general directive, it is our intention that there is not any 
burdensome red tape and that once the direction is given for the Type 
III organization, the charity is not unnecessarily put in limbo by the 
need for a reissuance when the official changes. It is safe to say that 
we intend that once the necessary direction is given as part of this 
compromise, then there is no requirement for renewals by that attorney 
general or subsequent attorney general that would put uncertainty at 
play for the organization. Isn't that my friend's understanding?
  Mr. SALAZAR. I agree with Senator Allard on his understanding and our 
intent. Once an organization is required to retain holdings in any 
business enterprise at the direction of an attorney general, those 
holdings will not constitute excess business holdings as a result of 
some future directive or another authority coming in and saying 
something different. That is precisely the kind of uncertainty we are 
attempting to avoid with these modifications. The special rule 
continues to apply. Otherwise, these organizations and their benefit to 
the community could be put at risk by future inconsistent actions 
driven by political gain rather than by the benefit to the community. 
And we must not lose sight of the fact that the primary goal of these 
organizations is to benefit their community. We all agree it is 
necessary for an organization to have certainty about its status and 
its exemption from the excess business holdings rules. I commend my 
colleague from Colorado for his work in having this much needed 
clarification included in the manager's amendment.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I thank my colleague for his kind remarks. 
There is no question that we intend to encourage more charitable giving 
in this country. Mr. President, we are a generous nation, as evident 
from the amazing outpouring of private support for the recent 
unfortunate rash of natural disasters both here in this country and 
abroad. The donors and the organizations need to be able to rely on the 
direction of the State attorney general and their legal status and this 
amendment does that. I thank my colleague for engaging me in this 
colloquy. Mr. President, I yield the floor.


                   EXXON VALDEZ OIL SPILL LITIGATION

  Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I engage Mr. Grassley in a colloquy 
concerning income averaglng to recipients of punitive damages awards in 
the Exxon Valdez oil spill case, Case Number A89-095-CV (HRH). 
Specifically, I would like to address how this will affect those who 
engage in commercial fishing in Alaska as their occupation.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I would be happy if Ms. Murkowski 
explained this issue in further detail.
  Ms. MURKOWSKI. As all of us know, the Exxon Valdez ran aground in 
March of 1989, spilling 11 million gallons of oil into Prince William 
Sound in Alaska. A class action jury trial was held in federal court in 
Anchorage, AK, in 1994. The plaintiffs included 32,000 fishermen among 
others whose livelihoods were gravely affected by this disaster. The 
jury awarded $5 billion in punitive damages to the plaintiff class. The 
punitive damage award has been on repeated appeal by the Exxon 
Corporation since 1994. Many of the original plaintiffs, possibly more 
than 1,000 people, have already died.
  Once the punitive damage award of the Exxon Valdez litigation is 
settled, many fishermen will receive payments to reimburse them for 
fishing income lost due to the environmental consequences of the Exxon 
Valdez oil spill. It is estimated that the eventual settlement may be 
$6.75 billion or more.
  Fishermen already are eligible for income averaging of any fishing 
income. Section 1301 of the Internal Revenue Code allows fishermen to 
average fishing income over a 3-year period of time. Therefore, I want 
it to be clear that any commercial fishermen receiving punitive damages 
under the aforementioned Exxon Valdez oil spill case should be allowed 
to average their income over a 3-year period.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I thank Ms. Murkowski for explaining 
this issue in more detail.

[[Page 27054]]


  Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, I rise today to oppose the fiscal 
course this Senate is pursuing. The legislation before us today will 
unnecessarily add $60 billion to our Nation's debt. But even more 
troubling is the insistence that reasonable tax cuts be passed using 
the reconciliation process. I think most Senators in this body believe 
that today's action is just the first step toward ultimately approving 
more tax cuts for wealthy investors. I hope that my colleagues will 
reject this scheme.
  I appreciate the work of the chairman of the Finance Committee, who 
crafted a bill that includes only broadly supported tax cuts. Tax 
relief for rebuilding the hurricane-devastated gulf coast; extension 
and enhancement of the R&D tax credit and the welfare tax credits; 
limitations on the reach of the alternative minimum tax; and tax 
incentives for charitable giving are all policies that enjoy broad 
bipartisan support.
  Unfortunately, though, this bill is not fiscally responsible. As the 
Democratic alternative demonstrates, it is possible to enact the 
popular tax cuts proposed here without adding $60 billion to the debt 
we pass down to our children and grandchildren. In an age of record 
deficits, Congress must choose its priorities. We could close tax 
loopholes. We could make it more difficult for companies to avoid 
taxation by moving their headquarters offshore. We could require oil 
companies to pay their fair share of taxes. We could close the tax gap 
by more aggressively enforcing our existing tax code.
  These reasonable policies are included in the Democratic alternative, 
and I hope that all of my colleagues will support them to restore 
fiscal discipline in this Congress. And to anyone who believes the 
fallacy that ``deficits don't matter,'' I would point out that this 
year we will spend more money paying interest on our debt than 
providing health care to our most vulnerable citizens through Medicaid.
  The budget reconciliation process, which allows for expedited 
consideration of legislation on the Senate floor, was created so that 
Congress could enact difficult policies in order to reduce our national 
deficits. Sadly, the process is now being abused to enact policies that 
worsen our deficit and are so narrowly supported that they cannot 
garner sufficient votes under normal Senate procedures.
  Foremost among the current proposals that does not enjoy bipartisan 
support is, of course, the extension of tax breaks for capital gains 
and dividends. I recognize that the leadership has dropped those 
provisions from this bill. However, this Senator has absolutely no 
confidence that the intention of using the reconciliation process to 
pass those tax breaks has changed. Extending those tax breaks for even 
one additional year would cost $10 billion. And it is important to 
consider who will get that $10 billion instead of the federal treasury. 
Three quarters of the capital gains and dividend income is received by 
taxpayers making more than $200,000 per year.
  In my State of West Virginia, fewer than 17 percent of taxpayers 
reported any dividend income; and fewer than 11 percent of taxpayers 
had any capital gains. Moreover, we ought to keep in mind that even 
without the extra tax breaks in 2009, people will pay at most 20 
percent taxes on capital gains, which is a lower tax rate than we apply 
to many people's labor. I do not accept the argument that it is a 
national priority to extend these tax breaks to 2009.
  The investor tax breaks simply do not compare favorably with the 
provisions of this bill. With the ever escalating costs of college and 
the increasing need for a highly educated population that can be 
globally competitive, it is appropriate to maintain the tax deduction 
for tuition and fees that made education more affordable for 3.6 
million Americans in 2003, including almost 17,000 West Virginians. And 
as low-income working Americans struggle to save for their retirement, 
I am pleased to support the saver's credit which helped 5.4 million 
Americans in 2003, including more than 40,000 West Virginians.
  The tuition deduction, the saver's cedit, and most of the other 
provisions in this bill enjoy broad bipartisan support. Congress can 
act before the end of this year, in a bipartisan fashion, to extend 
these important tax provisions, and offset the cost to the treasury.
  I believe that many Senators on my side of the aisle would welcome an 
opportunity to support legislation providing relief to the gulf coast 
and extending the expiring tax provisions in a fiscally responsible 
way--but without the specter of a reconciliation process that is 
specifically intended to enact more tax cuts for our wealthiest 
citizens. I cannot support this bill, and I cannot condone a 
reconciliation process designed to limit the rights of the minority 
while increasing the deficit.
  Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, in light of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and 
the mounting $319 billion deficit, Americans have increasingly called 
on Congress to account for its spending. The reconciliation process is 
designed to answer these calls for fiscal responsibility by forcing 
lawmakers to look deeply and honestly into the federal budget and make 
necessary spending cuts and provide deserved tax relief.
  The tax reconciliation bill, currently being considered by the 
Senate, does many worthwhile things to this end--such as extending 
essential tax provisions set to expire this year like increased 
exemption levels for the AMT--and providing incentives to encourage 
charitable giving. The good effects of these provisions, however, are 
undercut by a fundamental inconsistency in the larger bill--namely, the 
bill that claims to provide tax relief actually raises taxes. Demanding 
more taxpayer dollars, in an effort to control federal congressional 
spending, is not the answer.
  Section 561 of the bill, the LIFO provision, not only imposes an 
additional $4.923 billion tax but does so selectively on the energy 
industry alone. The LIFO provision artificially raises taxable income 
solely for a subset of energy businesses, requiring them to report 
higher profits than those mandated under prevailing accounting rules 
for the sole purpose of imposing a discriminatory tax on these 
businesses. Section 561 calls this ``revaluation of LIFO inventories,'' 
but let us call this provision what it really is--a windfall profits 
tax.
  Proponents of a windfall profits tax on the energy industry justify 
the tax on two grounds: that (1) energy industry companies currently 
pay too little in taxes compared to profits, and (2) the tax is 
effective.
  As to the first, over the past 25 years, oil companies directly paid 
or remitted more than $2.2 trillion in taxes, after adjusting for 
inflation, to Federal and State governments, including excise taxes, 
royalty payments and State and Federal corporate income taxes. That 
amounts to more than three times what they earned in profits during the 
same period, according to the latest numbers from the Bureau of 
Economic Analysis and U.S. Department of Energy. And these figures do 
not include local property taxes, State sales and severance taxes, and 
on-shore royalty payments.
  In addition, far from being excessive, oil industry profits have 
historically been below the national average. The most recent 
statistics available show that this continues to be the case. In the 
second quarter of 2005, the oil industry earned 7.7 cents for every 
dollar of sales, where the average profit for all of U.S. industry in 
the second quarter was 7.9 cents for every dollar of sales. The rate of 
return on oil sales for the third quarter of 2005 is slightly higher at 
8.1 cents for every dollar of sale, still very near the average across 
all industries.
  Even more illustrative, 13 U.S. industries earned higher profits in 
the second quarter than the oil and natural gas industry, including 
banking, 19.6 cents; software and services, 17 cents; consumer 
services, 10.9 cents; and real estate, 8.9 cents. The facts speak for 
themselves.
  Proponents of the windfall profit tax also say that the tax is 
effective. In 1990, however, the Congressional Research Service, CRS, 
analyzed the effects of the windfall profits tax which was enacted in 
1980 and repealed in

[[Page 27055]]

1988. CRS found that the tax reduced domestic oil production from 
between 3 and 6 percent and increased American dependence on foreign 
oil sources by 8 to 16 percent.
  Energy markets are cyclical and the industry must manage its business 
in the face of significant price fluctuations. The industry has to ride 
out periods of low prices in anticipation of recovering during the 
periods of high prices. When oil prices are low, as they were 
throughout the 1990s, energy industry profits are insufficient to 
induce investment. Oil supplies are tight today for this reason. When 
prices rise, however, the industry is induced to invest in new 
infrastructure and production in hopes of capturing the benefits of 
higher prices. Eventually, this leads to lower prices again.
  Reinvestment is critical. The Congressional Budget Office estimates 
capital losses from Hurricane Katrina and Rita in the energy-producing 
industries will range from $18 billion to $31 billion. Imposing a tax 
on profits, however, reduces essential investment in energy production. 
If taxing profits prevents the energy industry from benefiting during 
period of high prices, there will be little incentive to invest in 
domestic productions, thereby increasing the Nation's dependence on 
foreign oil.
  The goal of Federal energy policy should not be to hurt--or help--the 
major oil companies. The goal should be to help American consumers. 
Taxing capital for investment does not grow jobs, does not grow the 
economy--only fails American consumers.
  The tax reconciliation bill is problematic not only for its inclusion 
of the windfall profit tax but also for its omission of a critical 
provision--the extension of the 15 percent reduced tax rate for 
dividends and capital gains. While critics argue that the reduced tax 
rates of dividends and capital gains are tax cuts for the ``rich'' and 
that the costs are too high, the lower rates have been remarkably 
successful. Some of its successes include: significantly boosting 
capital investment, contributing to the economic efficiency of the 
corporate sector, and dramatically increasing dividend distributions--
benefiting all Americans owning dividend-paying stocks, a significant 
number of whom are far from wealthy.
  Specifically, in the year following enactment of the dividend tax 
cut, 113 publicly traded corporations initiated dividend payments for 
the first time, compared to an average of 22 companies in prior years. 
Further, through July 29, 2005, the 500 U.S. companies making up the 
Standard & Poor's index alone have increased their dividend payments 
626 times, resulting in a 21 percent increase in average quarterly 
dividends. If these successes are to continue--and reach their full 
potential--reduced tax rates for dividends and capital gains must be 
included in any comprehensive tax relief bill.
  And continued tax relief is what this country needs to both generate 
more economic growth and encourage individuals and corporations to save 
and invest. I am prepared to vote for a tax relief package--I cannot 
think of a time in the past when I have not--however, it must be 
effective, and it must actually provide relief. The tax reconciliation 
bill before the Senate falls short of this. I sincerely hope the 
conference report on this bill comes back better and stronger--
eliminating industry-specific tax increases antithetical to the bill's 
purpose while providing for sound relief provisions like the reduction 
in dividend and capital gains tax rates--so that we can satisfactorily 
answer the American taxpayers' call for a policy of fiscal 
responsibility.
  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, I regret that I am unable to vote for 
the legislation. I support the overwhelming majority of provisions that 
are contained in this bill and appreciate that they need to be extended 
before next year so they don't expire. I cannot in good conscience, 
though, vote for another tax bill that is unpaid for and adds to our 
national debt. For too many years, the majority has passed tax cuts as 
short term or temporary measures to mask the real costs of these 
provisions. We can no longer continue on this course of fiscal 
irresponsibility. It is for this reason that I supported an alternative 
offered by the minority that provided similar tax relief but did it in 
a budget neutral fashion by shutting down corporate loopholes. I also 
supported amendments during debate on this bill that would put back in 
place budget rules that would prevent Congress from either cutting 
taxes or raising spending if the net effect is that it adds to our 
national debt. We operated under these responsible budgetary rules 
during the previous administration and it gave us our first back-to-
back years of surplus in generations. In 5 short years we have not only 
squandered the opportunities that these budgetary surpluses offered us, 
but we created a fiscal mess that handicaps future generations. I look 
forward to working with my colleagues in the coming months to head our 
nation back towards the days of surpluses. Unfortunately, this bill is 
not a step in that direction. Even though I support the majority of 
provisions contained in it, I must respectively oppose its passage.
  Mr. GREGG. Mr. President, pursuant to section 313(c) of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, I submit for the Record a list of 
material in S. 2020 considered to be extraneous under subsections 
(b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), and (b)(1)(E) of section 313. The inclusion or 
exclusion of material on the following list does not constitute a 
determination of extraneousness by the Presiding Officer of the Senate.
  I ask unanimous consent that the material be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                   Title V--Revenue Offset Provisions


                                 senate

       Provision: Sec. 532(c). Violation/Comments: 313(b)(1)(A)--
     Report to Congress.

  Mr. REED. Mr. President, I oppose the tax reconciliation bill now 
before us. This bill illustrates the cynicism of the whole 
reconciliation process this year, which, at the end of the day, is just 
a vehicle to short circuit a full Senate debate on the President's 
unfair tax cuts.
  The fiscal year 2006 budget resolution instructed the Finance 
Committee to report up to $70 billion of tax cuts. Only half of those 
tax cuts were to be offset by reconciled spending cuts, so the net 
effect of reconciliation would be to add to the budget deficit. In the 
current economic and budget environment, there is no justification for 
enacting tax cuts that increase the deficit and must be paid for by 
adding to the debt.
  For various reasons, the bill before us does not contain the full $70 
billion of tax cuts. Most notably, it does not include provisions to 
extend the temporary capital gains and dividend tax cuts passed in 2003 
and set to expire in 2008. It would be wise and prudent budget policy 
to abandon the effort to extend those debt-financed tax cuts, which go 
to taxpayers in the highest income brackets. But what you see is not 
what you are going to get. Those provisions will be back. In fact, the 
Majority Leader has said he will not bring a conference report to the 
floor that does not include an extension of the capital gains and 
dividend provisions.
  Even without any capital gains and dividend provisions, this tax bill 
provides benefits mainly to upper-income taxpayers. An analysis by the 
Joint Economic Committee democratic staff finds that about $43 billion 
of the tax cuts can be allocated by family income group. Of those, 
about 80 percent would accrue to the 20 percent of families with the 
highest incomes, That fraction will rise when the extension of the 
capital gains and dividend tax cuts is added in conference.
  ``What you see is not what you are going to get'' is a phrase that 
also applies to the spending piece of reconciliation. There is much to 
criticize in the Senate's $35 billion spending reconciliation bill, but 
any conference bill that comes before us is likely to be far worse, 
with much larger cuts to benefits that middle- and lower-income 
families rely on that will be way out of all proportion to any tax cuts 
they might receive.

[[Page 27056]]

  The Senate can take a step toward restoring fiscal discipline by 
voting down this tax reconciliation bill.
  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today in support of the tax 
reconciliation bill the Senate is now considering.
  As with many of my Finance Committee colleagues, I am both relieved 
and disturbed to see this bill on the floor in its present form.
  I am relieved because it includes many important provisions, 
including some that will serve to help keep the economy strong as well 
as particular relief provisions for the areas impacted by the 
hurricanes.
  However, I am disturbed because we were unable to include in the bill 
one of the most important provisions to our continuing prosperity--an 
extension of the lower tax rates for capital gains and dividends.
  I understand perfectly the reasons some of my colleagues wanted the 
extension removed. In an era of high deficits it is tempting to 
preserve revenue any way we can. While I also want to reduce the 
deficit, I believe that leaving out the extension for the special tax 
rate for capital gains and dividends will ultimately be 
counterproductive and harmful to the economy.
  In an economy where there is universal agreement that Americans are 
not saving enough, the last thing we want to do is decrease the 
incentives to save. I urge my colleagues to hearken back to the debates 
we had over Social Security reform earlier this year.
  Over the course of those debates, we found that there was substantial 
disagreement in the Senate over how to reform Social Security. But at 
the same time, nearly everyone seemed to agree that Americans need to 
save more for retirement and that our Government can do much better at 
encouraging us to save.
  Allowing the lower tax rate on dividends and capital gains to expire 
is going in exactly the wrong direction.
  The net return on savings is an important determinant for how much 
people save, and the higher the tax on saving the less saving we do. 
Work by Glenn Hubbard of Columbia University and Kevin Hassett of the 
American Enterprise Institute has shown that the net return on savings 
is an important determinant in how much people save.
  The low returns in the stock market as well as the currently low 
interest rates throughout the world explain in part the low savings 
rates that we currently see in the United States.
  There is no question that reducing the net returns by increasing the 
tax rate on dividends and capital gains would definitely harm savings. 
Not only does treating dividend and capital gain ordinary income 
depress saving, but it is also just plain unfair.
  This is something I hear again and again from Utahns. Just consider 
how pernicious the tax on dividends is. The person who buys stock for 
$1,000 already paid taxes on this money when he or she earned it.
  The company then pays a corporate tax of 35 percent on its profits. 
Then, from what remains of its profits, the other 65 cents, it is free 
to declare a dividend and provide some money back to its stockholders, 
who also pay a tax on those dividends.
  Why on Earth should we not have a lower tax on dividends and capital 
gains? The Government has already made two grabs at that money.
  What is more, the real cost of the lower tax rate on dividends and 
capital gains has been consistently overstated. As my colleague, 
Senator Bunning, remarked in the Finance Committee markup, the revenue 
collected from these two taxes exceeded the Joint Committee on 
Taxation's, JCT, estimate by nearly $20 billion in the past year, 
according to one study.
  In fact, the unprecedented 15-percent increase in tax revenue 
collected in the past year demonstrates that the best way to lessen 
budget pressures is not to raise taxes but to focus on policies that 
lead to solid economic growth. That 15 percent growth translates into a 
$100 billion reduction in the budget deficit this year.
  Let us stop and think about that for a minute, Mr. President.
  Pro growth tax policies have allowed us to grow our revenues by 15 
percent in the past year, this translates into more than $250 billion 
in higher revenues. If we can find a way to control ourselves on the 
spending side, this could mean real progress in deficit reduction.
  As my colleagues well know, we have gone through a great deal of pain 
just to find $35 billion in spending growth reductions in the spending 
reconciliation bill Sometimes I think that many of my colleagues 
ignore, or are not aware of, the power of strong economic growth on our 
deficit reduction capabilities.
  If we look back to the late 1990s, when we did for a while eliminate 
the deficit and create some surpluses, it is easy to see that strong 
economic growth played a very strong part in that success, as did some 
curbs on spending.
  I urge my colleagues not to forget this as we consider the importance 
of extending these favorable rates on dividends and capital gains.
  More generally, the attempt to lay blame for our budget deficit 
entirely at the hands of the tax cuts is mistaken.
  The process of forecasting budget revenues is still a nearly 
impossible task despite some hard work done by a group of very talented 
economists at the Congressional Budget Office, CBO, the JCT, and the 
Office of Management and Budget, OMB.
  One fact that is clear from our many years of work is that the 
principal factor driving the amount of revenue collected by the 
Government is economic growth.
  Estimates done by CBO showed that the shift from budget surpluses to 
deficits in the 2001-2003 time period owed more to spending increases, 
much of which could be attributed to 9/11, and the reduction in 
economic growth than to the reduction in tax rates.
  In short, maintaining our pre-2001 tax rates would not have preserved 
the budget surplus, and in fact would have exacerbated the recession, 
further reducing revenues.
  And today, we are seeing the powerful effects that solid economic 
growth can have on Government revenue.
  As I alluded earlier, the booming tax revenues of today are 
reminiscent of the 1990s, when a sustained period of solid economic 
growth not only filled our Government's coffers but dramatically 
lowered unemployment, increased incomes at all levels, and reduced 
poverty in a dramatic fashion.
  Many opponents of the extension argue that lower tax rates on 
dividends and capital gains represent yet another tax break for the 
rich. To boil down the lower tax rate to a tired class-warfare argument 
is over simplistic and wrong.
  Reducing the taxation on investment income benefits everyone in 
America because it ultimately increases productivity and, with it, 
wages and economic growth as well.
  Nobel Prize-winning economists Robert Lucas and Ed Prescott have 
argued that eliminating the pernicious taxation on savings is the 
closest thing there is to a free lunch.
  When we save more it means that there is more money available for 
firms to modernize and expand and compete in the world economy. Former 
chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Greg Mankiw has shown in his 
research that even those who do not own stocks benefit in the long run 
from the lower tax rates on investment income.
  The U.S. economy benefits greatly from the presence of a stable, 
relatively predictable tax and regulatory regime. Investors do not like 
to be surprised, and they like predictability.
  As my colleague Senator Kyl has pointed out, leaving the extension of 
the special tax rates on dividends and capital gains until later has 
dramatically increased uncertainty in the minds of nearly every person 
investing in the United States.
  Investors are not looking at the tax rates in place today--they are 
looking at the rates they expect to be in place several years down the 
road when they plan to take the gains of their investments and pay the 
taxes.
  I note that the tax reconciliation bill approved this week by the 
House Ways and Means Committee included a 2-year extension of the lower 
rate for capital gains and dividends. I hope that

[[Page 27057]]

this provision survives intact in the House bill and that bill passes 
the other body.
  If so, the capital gains and dividends extension will be an item for 
discussion in the conference of these bills with the House. Therefore, 
this tax bill may yet include this important provision before it goes 
to the President for his signature.
  Another important provision that needs to be included in this 
legislation is an extension of the research tax credit. Companies 
throughout the country, and many in Utah, depend on this credit to 
remain competitive and to innovate.
  A robust research credit is vital for our future world leadership in 
technology and our economic growth.
  The revised mark includes the credit expansion in the form of the 
alternative simplified credit.
  An increase in U.S. R&D spending benefits everyone, by ultimately 
improving the productivity of the American worker. Increasing 
productivity invariably results in an increase in wages throughout the 
economy.
  It is interesting to listen to some of my colleagues on the other 
side of the aisle when they talk about these tax provisions in their 
entirety. They make it appear that this package is nothing more than a 
large tax cut for the wealthy in our Nation. Of course, nothing could 
be further from the truth.
  In reality, other than those provisions that are designed to give aid 
to the victims of the hurricanes, and to help rebuild the gulf coast 
areas that were the hardest hit, this bill is about extending certain 
provisions that are set to expire. Most of those provisions expire in 
just a few weeks.
  I think it is important for Utahns and all Americans to understand 
that enactment of this legislation is necessary to prevent a very large 
tax increase on middle-class Americans. Practically every single 
provision in this bill enjoys plenty of bipartisan support.
  So while some of my colleagues are deriding this bill as a whole as 
an unnecessary and unwarranted tax giveaway to the rich, they are 
quietly promoting the individual provisions in the bill as necessary 
provisions for their constituents.
  While I support this bill and certainly want to see it go forward to 
conference with the House, where we are hopeful it can be improved 
further, there are several provisions in it that cause me a great deal 
of concern.
  One of these items of concern relates to a provision located in the 
charitable reforms section of the bill.
  Specifically, it would place a floor of $500 on a joint return on the 
amount of deduction a taxpayer who itemizes his or her deductions may 
claim for a charitable contribution.
  I see absolutely no rationale for this limitation.
  I do know that it would discourage and mistreat many Utahns who make 
small contributions to their churches and to local charities. It seems 
to me that this limitation would hit those who make small donations 
particularly hard.
  The entire point of extending the charitable deduction to those who 
do not itemize is to give an incentive to more people to donate to 
charity. I believe the non-itemizers deduction would do this, so I have 
supported it.
  But why in the world would we want to give an incentive to non-
itemizers and then turn around and remove a current incentive to those 
who itemize? It makes no sense.
  This provision is unfair to itemizers in another way. The standard 
deduction already assumes a certain level of charitable contributions.
  In order to give non-itemizers an incentive to actually give those 
assumed contributions, we are effectively allowing them to double dip 
in this provision. I can live with that because I think it will result 
in increased donations.
  However, to take away a current benefit from itemizers is beyond the 
pale. There are many thousands of Utahns who give 10 percent of their 
income to their church. Because of this, Utah has a higher percentage 
of taxpayers who itemize.
  Why should they be penalized for doing the right thing?
  Why would we remove an incentive to them so we could create another 
incentive to those who do not give as much?
  This is totally unfair.
  I am also very concerned about another revenue raising provision in 
the bill that seems completely counterproductive and foolish to me. I 
am referring to the provision that would remove the ability of certain 
integrated oil companies to use the LIFO method of accounting for their 
inventories.
  To me, this seems like a backdoor attempt to place a windfall profits 
tax on oil companies, which was ineffective the first time it was 
tried.
  I am even more concerned that this provision could very well miss its 
intended target and hit some of the smaller oil refineries around the 
nation that we have been trying to help in recent tax bills.
  I am told that it would affect three companies in Utah that happen to 
have some production, some refining, and are retailers. These three 
Utah companies are not the large integrated oil firms that this revised 
mark may be targeting.
  I do not think this change is good policy for even the large 
companies, but in addition to being very poor policy, it also seems 
misdirected.
  The American Job Creation Act we passed a year ago included a tax 
incentive to encourage small refiners to comply with the new low-sulfur 
diesel regulations. The Energy bill we passed this summer included a 
provision to allow refiners to expense immediately the cost of 
additional refinery capacity.
  The provision in the bill before us would totally reverse these 
incentives and much more. Is not this like giving someone a quarter 
with our right hand and then taking a dollar away from that same person 
with our left hand?
  If we wish to encourage more production of oil and especially if we 
wish to encourage the creation of more capacity to refine oil products, 
this is not the way to go about it. I hope these offensive provisions 
can be removed, or at least mitigated, in the managers' amendment.
  Mr. President, I know that sometimes one must take one step back for 
each two steps forward. Well, I think that this bill is an example of 
us taking one step back to take one and a half steps forward, but in 
the end, we are at least moving forward.
  I would rather have an extension of the research tax credit and AMT 
along with an extension of the low rates for dividends and capital 
gains, but I will save the battle for the latter for another day.
  The Finance Committee has an incredible array of legislative 
provisions that pass before us each year. The chair has, as usual, done 
a masterful job of satisfying the diverse interests of the members of 
the committee with his legislation.
  One day, I hope to see a Finance Committee that takes a small step 
forward in every single piece of legislation to make it easier and more 
rewarding to save in America. The importance of increasing saving to 
the growth potential of our economy cannot be underestimated.
  I urge my colleagues to join me in supporting this bill.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, for too many years now, the administration 
and the majority in Congress have been pursuing an irresponsible fiscal 
policy of giving tax cuts mainly to the wealthiest Americans among us.
  By generating revenue less than we are spending, our Nation is 
falling deeper into the debt ditch. The increase in our debt threatens 
us with rising long-term interest rates. At a time when so many 
Americans have variable-rate mortgages, car loans, and other debts, 
rising interest rates that are predicted to accompany our swelling 
deficits will have a very real and immediate impact on many American 
families. And we will be passing this increased debt on to our children 
and grandchildren.
  This tax reconciliation bill contains a number of good provisions. In 
particular, the provision to ``patch'' the alternative minimum tax, 
AMT, is critical. Congress originally created the

[[Page 27058]]

AMT to make sure that the wealthiest Americans paid at least a minimum 
amount of tax; however, it is now catching many more taxpayers than 
Congress intended. The ``fix'' in the bill before us today would once 
again implement a temporary increase in the exemption level of the AMT 
by indexing it for inflation, thus saving many middle-income taxpayers 
from being affected by the AMT and having their Federal taxes 
increased.
  Today's bill also includes an expansion and extension on the research 
and development tax credit. R&D provides strength for our economy. It 
creates American jobs and improves the competitiveness of U.S. 
companies in the global marketplace. I am pleased that it will be 
extended.
  I am also glad that this bill would establish an itemized deduction 
for the mortgage insurance on qualified personal residence and 
incentives for donations to charitable organizations, as well as extend 
tax incentives for many important programs, including a deduction for 
tuition payments and related expenses, a continuation of the new 
markets tax credit, deductions for teachers who make out-of-pocket 
payments for classroom expenses.
  However, while these tax cuts are well targeted, it would be 
unconscionable to support their passage without paying for them. To 
start with, I wish we had adopted Senator Feinstein's amendment. Her 
amendment would have maintained two little known but important 
provisions known as ``PEP'' and ``Pease''. The personal exemption phase 
out, PEP, reduces a taxpayer's total personal exemption for incomes 
exceeding $218,950 for married couples, $145,950 for individuals. The 
``Pease'' provision, which is named after the late Representative Don 
Pease, reduces certain itemized deductions for higher income taxpayers. 
There is currently a repeal scheduled to start next year on both of 
these, which does little for the economy beyond further increasing the 
deficit. Keeping PEP and Pease could reduce the deficit by an estimated 
$31 billion over 5 years. That is enough to pay for the entire AMT fix.
  Senator Feinstein's amendment also would have rolled back the Bush 
tax cuts on capital gains rates, dividend rates, and income tax rates 
for millionaires. I supported this amendment, which unfortunately was 
defeated.
  In closing, I support many of the tax provisions in this bill, but I 
cannot support passing then without paying for them. On balance this 
fiscally irresponsible bill will leave our country worse off.
  Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I am increasingly alarmed about the 
congressional budget process as it now operates.
  I helped to write the Budget Act of 1974. At the time, I served as 
chairman of the Subcommittee on the Standing Rules of the Senate. The 
subcommittee was tasked with studying the budget process reforms 
reported by the then-Senate Government Operations Committee as they 
affected the Senate rules. I met with a working group of staff that was 
comprised of 10 standing committees of the Senate, and which included 
90 hours of meetings during 25 sessions over a 16-day period. After the 
staff had completed its work, I spent many hours with the Senate 
Parliamentarian and met in all day sessions and over holiday weekends 
with the staff from the Congressional Research Service and the Senate 
legal counsel. I helped to manage the Senate's floor deliberations of 
the Budget Act as majority whip, and, when the Senate completed its 
many weeks of debate and amendment, I served on the conference 
committee that finalized the Budget Act.
  I studied the Budget Act. I championed it. I supported it.
  And so I can say, without equivocation, that the process the Senate 
utilizes today hardly resembles the process envisioned in 1974. The 
budget process used today obscures more than it clarifies the tax and 
spending decisions of the Congress. Through a growing list of 60-vote 
points of order, it is weakening the ability of the Congress to 
exercise its power over the purse, deferring more and more authority 
over fiscal matters to the executive branch. The budget process 
increasingly serves as a means to circumvent the role of the Senate to 
deliberate, and, lately, it has been used in a way that has fostered an 
unprecedented and unbroken string of deficits and debt.
  I have spoken many times about how the budget reconciliation process 
has been distorted and the extent to which that process has been used 
to worsen deficits and unnecessarily limit debate and amendment. Here 
today is another example of one of these reconciliation bills, where 
debate is limited, amendments are curtailed, and arms are twisted to 
get the bare minimum of a majority of Senators to advance partisan 
legislation, only to see a brandnew bill rewritten in a closed 
conference committee that excludes any voice of dissent.
  This week, the already grossly abbreviated reconciliation exercise 
has been curtailed further, as the normal 3-day debate is crammed into 
a period allowing for less than 2 days of debate. Meanwhile, Senators 
are distracted with other legislation that must be addressed before the 
Senate breaks for the Thanksgiving holiday--legislation that is more 
pressing than the extension of some of these tax cuts which will not 
expire for several more years.
  The budget process has been distorted, where reconciliation is abused 
by both sides eager to score political points. Reconciliation is no 
longer simply a budgetary device to round out the numbers at the end of 
the fiscal year, as it was intended in 1974. It has become a favorite 
mechanism for bypassing the rules of the Senate for circumventing the 
limits imposed upon the capricious passions of a determined majority. 
Once a Senator's right to debate has been waived, what is left can 
almost be described as a state of chaos in the Senate. If you think 
that term ``chaos'' seems a bit extreme, just wait a few more hours for 
the vote-arama to begin.
  Soon, the statutory limit of 20 hours of debate on this bill will 
expire, and the Senate will enter into a consent agreement whereby 2 
minutes of each debate are allocated to each amendment and Senators are 
forced to vote blindly in rapid succession on amendment after amendment 
after amendment. Many of these amendments have never been seen before 
by the Senate, and many will not even be explained to Senators prior to 
the casting of their votes.
  To the credit of Senators Gregg and Conrad, the number of amendments 
considered in vote-aramas have been limited in recent times, but vote-
aramas continue to occur nonetheless.
  Just 2 weeks ago, the Senate considered the so-called Deficit 
Reduction Reconciliation Act of 2005. After the 20 hours of debate had 
expired, the Senate entered into an agreement by unanimous consent that 
limited debate to 2 minutes per amendment prior to each vote. In one 
day, the Senate considered 41 amendments, with only 2 minutes of debate 
per amendment, and with only 16 of those amendments offered prior to 
the expiration of debate. That is 25 amendments that the Senate had not 
debated, or even seen before, receiving votes based upon whatever 
knowledge Senators could extract from the din in just 2 minutes.
  In 2003, the Senate considered 84 amendments in this manner, without 
any of those amendments being offered, debated, or generally made 
available to Senators before casting their vote. In 2001, the number of 
amendments considered in this manner was 78, again without any of those 
amendments being offered, debated, or generally made available to 
Senators before casting their vote.
  All together, in the last 6 years, the Senate has considered 246 
amendments to budget resolutions and reconciliation bills, within a so-
called vote-arama process that does not allow the Senate to debate 
amendments or, in too many cases, to even see amendments before 
Senators are asked to cast their vote. God help the American people.
  I once described vote-aramas as pandemonium, which was the Palace of 
Satan designated by Milton in Paradise Lost. But that term almost fails 
to describe the ignominy of the Senate when it becomes engulfed in 
these budget

[[Page 27059]]

carnivals. It's embarrassing to the institution. It is no way to 
legislate. We cannot claim to serve the interests of our constituents 
if we don't have time even to read the amendments on which we are 
casting our votes. Read The Federalist Paper No. 62 by Madison: ``It 
will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of 
their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be 
read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood.'' Vote-arama 
means Senators are flying blind.
  I have pleaded with the Senate to avoid using this reconciliation 
process because I abhor what it does to this institution. It is not a 
necessary exercise. The Budget Act does not require it, nor does the 
Budget Act require, or even mention, the use of vote-aramas. We are 
doing this to ourselves. This is self-inflicted abuse, and our Nation 
suffers as a result.
  Since 2001, this reconciliation process has yielded an unbroken 
string of unprecedented deficits and debt. At $339 billion in the 
fiscal year 2003, $412 billion in the fiscal year 2004, and $317 
billion in the fiscal year 2005, budget deficits have grown to record 
levels 3 years in a row. Within 5 years, the national debt is projected 
to rise to $11 trillion. The interest payments on that debt is growing 
to enormous levels and will surpass in 2010 a whopping $314 billion per 
year. That is $314 billion that could be used to build and modernize 
our transportation and energy infrastructure, but that will be paid to 
foreign and domestic bond holders instead. If there is a force that is 
sinking the budget into an ocean of deficits and debt, it resides, at 
least in part, among abuses of the budget process.
  Outside of the budget reconciliation process, Senators could insist 
that tax cuts be offset. These are not controversial tax extensions. 
The alternative minimum tax relief, the deduction of college tuition 
and teacher classroom expenses, the section 179 expensing and research 
and development credit--all of these could pass overwhelmingly if 
offsets could be found, and it could be done without having to put the 
Senate through this exercise. Senators might even have the opportunity 
to thoughtfully consider amendments to the bill to develop compromises 
that improve the legislation and satisfy both parties. Senators could 
go home touting a piece of bipartisan legislation that all sides find 
agreeable.
  I call upon the Republican and Democratic leadership, as well as the 
members of the Budget Committee, and all Senators, to help reform this 
process. The process as it currently operates is intolerable, and it 
damages this institution severely. Whatever political advantage may be 
claimed today, this process ultimately weakens the Senate as an 
institution, and does a great disservice to the American people.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I oppose this legislation, and I would like 
to take just a few minutes to explain why. But before I do, I want to 
begin by commending and congratulating both the chairman and ranking 
member of the Finance Committee for their hard work on this bill. 
Senator Max Baucus and Senator Chuck Grassley work very well together 
on the broad range of issues that come before their Committee. While we 
have an honest and good faith disagreement about this particular 
legislation, I want them to know how much sincere respect I have for 
both of them and how grateful I am for their outstanding leadership of 
the Finance Committee.
  Mr. President, I have two major concerns about this bill. First, it 
needlessly increases the deficit when we should be saving for the 
future. And, second, it paves the way for a budget that is inconsistent 
with the values of the American people.
  Our country faces an enormous fiscal challenge that will begin in a 
few years, when the baby boomers retire. America's debt now exceeds $8 
trillion. Under the Republican budget that figure will increase by more 
than $3 trillion in just 5 years. We simply must restore fiscal 
discipline. That means we must do all we can to avoid further increases 
in the deficit, and to live under the pay-as-you-go rule. We did that 
in the 1990s, and that is a major reason why we not only eliminated our 
deficit, but ran record surpluses. That, in turn, is one reason we 
enjoyed the longest peacetime economic expansion in our Nation's 
history.
  During debate on this bill, Democrats tried to restore fiscal 
discipline. Led by the distinguished ranking member of the Budget 
Committee, Senator Kent Conrad, we offered an amendment that would have 
fully paid for the tax cuts in the bill. Unfortunately, the amendment 
was defeated on a largely party-line vote.
  Let me be clear: I support most of the tax cuts in this bill. I think 
we should provide relief from the alternative minimum tax, and we 
should extend the R&D and work opportunity tax credits, among others. I 
just think we should pay for them. Here and now. We shouldn't force our 
children and grandchildren to do so tomorrow.
  The other reason why I oppose this legislation is that it will pave 
the way for adoption of a budget that does not reflect America's 
values. To understand why, you need to step back and take a broad view 
of the budget legislation moving through the House and Senate.
  This tax reconciliation bill is really just one part of a broader 
budget plan that the Republican leadership is trying to push through to 
enactment. That plan includes substantial cuts in a wide range of 
programs important to middle class and more vulnerable Americans. Not 
long ago, the Senate approved legislation that cut Medicare, Medicaid, 
housing and agriculture, while authorizing drilling in a pristine 
Alaskan wildlife refuge. At the same time, the House is considering 
legislation to cut student loans, food stamps, and child support 
enforcement, while making even deeper cuts in Medicaid.
  These spending cuts are troubling. But what makes them truly 
outrageous is that they're intended to partially pay for tax breaks for 
special interests and multimillionaires.
  I know that the bill before us does not include those tax breaks. And 
I commend Senator Baucus and other colleagues on the Finance Committee 
for their work to keep capital gains and dividend tax breaks out of the 
bill.
  My concern, though, is that Senate Republican leadership has made it 
very clear that they intend to put those tax breaks right back into the 
legislation in a final agreement with the House. This isn't a secret. 
As Senator Grassley told the publication Tax Notes, ``If we pass a tax 
bill, it is going to have extension of capital gains in it.'' He 
further went on to say ``whether we have one in the Senate or not . . . 
we'll end up with it.''
  Other Republican colleagues have echoed the Chairman's comments.
  We know that capital gains and dividend tax breaks will be included 
in a final bill, if we let it get to that point. But why should we 
care? Why are those tax breaks so problematic?
  Well, first of all, remember how they are being paid for. Cuts in 
Medicare, Medicaid, student loans, food stamps, and other programs for 
middle class Americans and those who need help the most.
  Now let's consider who these tax breaks really help.
  Here's the answer: 53 percent of their benefits will go to those with 
incomes greater than $1 million.
  Let me repeat that: 53 percent of their benefits will go--no, not to 
millionaires--but to people with incomes over $1 million. We are 
talking about multi-millionaires, a small handful of America's most 
fortunate. These lucky few will get an average tax break of about 
$35,000.
  But what about those with incomes between, say, $50- and $200,000? 
Well, they will get an average tax cut of $112.
  And what about those with incomes less than $50,000? Six dollars.
  $35,000 for those with incomes more than a million dollars. Six 
dollars for those earning less than $50,000.
  And for this, the Republican majority wants to harm some of the 
Nation's most vulnerable families. That is not just wrong. It is 
immora1. And that is not my word--it comes from some of our Nation's 
top religious leaders.
  Again, Mr. President, I know this bill does not itself include those 
tax breaks. But if we send this fast track

[[Page 27060]]

bill to conference, make no mistake: those tax breaks are coming. It is 
as clear as night following day. The only way to prevent it is to stop 
th from going to conference in the first place.
  Finally, I want to make one more point. Even if my colleagues 
disagree about the problems with the Republican budget, I wish they 
could agree that we have more important things to do.
  Gas prices are skyrocketing. Families are struggling to fuel their 
vehicles and heat their homes. Farmers and businesses are feeling the 
pinch. Democrats have a plan to respond, to address price gouging and, 
ultimately, to make our nation energy independent. That is more 
important than harming the vulnerable to provide tax breaks to special 
interests and multi-millionaires, while increasing the deficit.
  Hurricane survivors are struggling. Thousands lack health coverage; 
150,000 live in hotel rooms and face the threat of homelessness in just 
2 weeks. Devastated communities have been forced into massive layoffs 
and are unable to provide even basic services. Democrats have a plan to 
address these urgent needs. That is more important than harming the 
vulnerable to provide tax breaks to special interests and multi-
millionaires, while increasing the deficit.
  The Iraq war is not going as well as the administration promised. 
More than 2070 Americans have died. More than 15,000 have been wounded. 
About 150,000 more remain in harm's way, while the Administration still 
has no plan to end the conflict and bring them home. Instead of being 
greeted as liberators, the violence continues nearly 2\1/2\ years after 
the start of the conflict. As the Senate said just a few days ago, our 
Nation badly needs a strategy for success. But we have a long way to go 
before that bill gets to the President's desk. And making that happen 
also is more important than harming the vulnerable to provide tax 
breaks to special interests and multi-millionaires, while increasing 
the deficit.
  While I support tax relief for the middle class, and I endorse most 
of the specific provisions in this legislation, I am going to vote 
against it. Approval of this bill will facilitate adoption of a 
Republican budget that is based on the wrong values and the wrong 
priorities.
  Together, we can do better.
  Let's provide middle class tax relief, but let's do it in a fiscally 
responsible way that doesn't harm families struggling to make ends 
meet.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, we are ready for third reading.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on the engrossment and third 
reading of the bill.
  The bill was ordered to be engrossed for a third reading, and was 
read the third time.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, we will be voting tomorrow morning at 
approximately 9:30. We will do the continuing resolution. We have an 
amendment on the resolution in the morning.
  There is going to be a lot going on tomorrow. We will not be able to 
further clarify the schedule until tomorrow. We will have multiple 
votes tomorrow morning beginning at 9:30.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on passage of the bill. The 
yeas and nays have been ordered.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant Journal clerk called the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. The following Senators were necessarily absent: the 
Senator from Alabama (Mr. Shelby) and the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. 
Lott).
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Corzine) 
is necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The result was announced--yeas 64, nays 33, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 347 Leg.]

                                YEAS--64

     Alexander
     Allard
     Allen
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burns
     Cantwell
     Carper
     Chambliss
     Clinton
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Coleman
     Collins
     Cornyn
     Crapo
     Dayton
     DeMint
     DeWine
     Dole
     Domenici
     Ensign
     Enzi
     Feinstein
     Frist
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hagel
     Hatch
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Johnson
     Kyl
     Landrieu
     Lincoln
     Lugar
     Martinez
     McCain
     McConnell
     Murkowski
     Nelson (FL)
     Nelson (NE)
     Pryor
     Roberts
     Salazar
     Santorum
     Schumer
     Sessions
     Smith
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stabenow
     Stevens
     Sununu
     Talent
     Thomas
     Thune
     Vitter
     Warner

                                NAYS--33

     Akaka
     Bayh
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Burr
     Byrd
     Chafee
     Conrad
     Craig
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Feingold
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Kennedy
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Obama
     Reed
     Reid
     Rockefeller
     Sarbanes
     Voinovich
     Wyden

                             NOT VOTING--3

     Corzine
     Lott
     Shelby
  The bill (S. 2020), as amended, was passed.
  (The bill will be printed in a future edition of the Record.)
  Mr. ENZI. I move to reconsider the vote and I move to lay that motion 
on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, this legislation did not happen by itself; 
it took hard work and perseverance. There is a long list of individuals 
who must be thanked.
  First, I want to thank the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation 
and Senate Legislative Counsel for their service. They did a tremendous 
job with this bill.
  I want to thank George Yin, the Chief of Staff of the Joint Committee 
on Taxation, in particular. This will probably be the last tax bill 
George will work on for the U.S. Congress. George is returning to the 
University of Virginia where he is a professor. His last day is 
tomorrow. George has served on the Joint Committee on Taxation for just 
over 2 years. During that time, he has provided tremendous insight and 
knowledge to me and my staff. He is called upon to know all the nuances 
of the Tax Code and provide recommendations on tax policy. He does this 
with unfailing competence. His work is of the highest caliber. I 
commend him for his work and thank him for his service to the U.S. 
Congress.
  Next, I must thank the hardworking staff of the Finance Committee. 
They stayed up many a sleepless night, and I applaud them for their 
expert counsel. I want to thank some staff members in particular. I 
appreciate the cooperation we received from the Republican staff, 
especially Kolan Davis, Mark Prater, Cathy Barre, Elizabeth Paris, 
Christy Mistr, Dean Zerbe, Chris Javens, John O'Neill, and Nick Wyatt.
  I also thank my staff for their perseverance and dedication, 
including Russ Sullivan, Patrick Heck, Bill Dauster, Melissa Mueller, 
Matt Jones, Judy Miller, Jon Selib, Ryan Abraham, and Tom Klouda. I 
also thank our dedicated fellows, Mary Baker, Brian Townsend, Richard 
Litsey, Jorlie Cruz, and Stuart Sirkin.
  Finally, I thank our hardworking interns: Jennifer Alwood, Ray 
Campbell, Mandy Cisneros, Will Larson, and James Reavis.
  I want to thank the chairman of the Finance Committee and my good 
friend, Senatory Grassley. It is not easy putting together a 
reconciliation bill. I thank Senator Grassley for once again ensuring a 
result that could receive broad support. It is my hope that we can 
maintain the spirit and substance of the Senate bill as we move through 
conference. We have a good bill before us.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

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