[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 155 (2009), Part 12]
[Senate]
[Pages 15805-15816]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                      TRAVEL PROMOTION ACT OF 2009

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
Senate will resume consideration of S. 1023, which the clerk will 
report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A bill (S. 1023) to establish a nonprofit corporation to 
     communicate United States entry policies and otherwise 
     promote leisure, business, and scholarly travel to the United 
     States.

  Pending:

       Reid (for Dorgan/Rockefeller) amendment No. 1347, of a 
     perfecting nature.
       Reid amendment No. 1348 (to amendment No. 1347), to change 
     the enactment date.
       Reid amendment No. 1349 (to the language proposed to be 
     stricken by amendment No. 1347), to change the enactment 
     date.
       Reid amendment No. 1350 (to amendment No. 1349), of a 
     perfecting nature.
       Reid motion to commit the bill to the Committee on 
     Commerce, Science, and Transportation, with instructions.
       Reid amendment No. 1351 (to the instructions on the motion 
     to recommit), to change the enactment date.
       Reid amendment No. 1352 (to amendment No. 1351), of a 
     perfecting nature.
       Reid amendment No. 1353 (to amendment No. 1352), of a 
     perfecting nature.

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from North Dakota is 
recognized.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, the legislation that is now the business 
of the Senate, on which we will have a cloture vote at 5:30, is 
legislation that probably demonstrates that agreement is near 
impossible in this body.
  If you cannot agree on tourism, what can you agree on? Tourism ought 
not to be the subject of very substantial controversy. Yet it is.
  Last week, in an article in Roll Call, it says ``Senate GOP still 
saying no.'' The quote is:

       When they bring bills up, we are going to extend the debate 
     as long as we can, block everything.

  So this legislation is simple, and it is bipartisan. Republicans and 
Democrats have both supported this legislation. I was the author of it. 
We have Republican and Democratic cosponsors. It is the Travel 
Promotion Act. Why should we promote travel?
  If you watched the U.S. Open Golf Tournament today, you might have 
seen the country of Turkey advertising during that golf tournament. 
They were running an advertisement saying: Come to Turkey. We want you 
to travel to Turkey and see the wonders of our great country.
  Why would they do that? Most countries are now aggressively involved 
in trying to attract international destination tourism to their 
country. Why is that the case? We know on average that an international 
traveler spends about $4,500 per trip, and that means they are 
purchasing hotel rooms and car rentals and going to see exhibits and 
parks and all kinds of things. The fact is, it is job creating in a 
country where international travelers visit. So most countries are now 
very active trying to attract people to their countries. Japan is, as 
are Great Britain, Italy, Turkey, France--you name it.
  I have some charts. Here is an example of what is happening out 
there. This is an advertisement: ``Sweet secrets from Japan.'' To learn 
about Japan and its culinary arts and traditions, this is an 
advertisement saying: Come to Japan. Come and travel in the country of 
Japan.
  Here is an advertisement from France. Picasso, Normandy Landings. 
Come and see France with the Eiffel Tower.
  Here is one for Belgium. ``Travel to Belgium where fun is all in 
fashion,'' they say.
  Brussels, ``Sophisticated simplicity, the capital of cool.''
  This one says: ``One special reason to visit India in 2009. Any time 
is a good time to visit the land of Taj. But there's no time like 
now.'' Come to India.
  The list goes on and on.
  Here is Ireland. ``The Emerald Island. Go where Ireland takes you.'' 
And here is a beautiful picture of Ireland saying: Come to our country.
  Finally, we have Australia. ``Arrive for an experience to remember. 
Depart with an adventure we'll never forget.'' Come to Australia.
  I describe these and the fact that Turkey advertises on a golf 
tournament because here is what happened to visitors to the United 
States since 2000: Between 2000 and 2008, we have had a 3-percent 
decrease in visitors to our country from other countries. Mr. 
President, 633,000 fewer people have come to the United States to visit 
per year that existed in 2000. Over 8 years, we have actually lost 
ground and had fewer people visit the United States. Contrast that with 
the number of international visitors around the world, which is up 40 
percent. The United States is down 3 percent.

[[Page 15806]]

  We have constructed--Republicans and Democrats together--a piece of 
legislation, which I have brought to the floor, that attempts to get 
our country into the game to say let's compete with Australia, France, 
Italy, Turkey, and Belgium and ask international visitors and travelers 
to come to our country to see the wonders of our great country. Spend 
some money here to create jobs here and create economic development 
here. We are not doing that now. We are not even in the game.
  So we suggest a private-public partnership we believe could be very 
helpful in attempting to stimulate international visitors to our 
country. The Travel Promotion Act will encourage visitors from all 
around the world. We establish a corporation for travel promotion.
  We fund it with a very small charge on international visitors coming 
to our country, as most countries do, by the way, a $10 fee on those 
who are coming from the countries that had the visa waiver provision 
with our country.
  Here is what has been said about our country recently, and here is 
perhaps why fewer people are visiting the United States. The Sydney 
Morning Herald said, ``Coming to America is not easy.'' I think there 
was a feeling around the world post-9/11, we are very interested in 
trying to keep some people out of here. Obviously we wanted to keep 
terrorists out. But we made it pretty difficult for people to come 
visit, get a visa, stand in line, wait for months. The Guardian said, 
``America, more hassle than it's worth.'' The Sunday Times in London 
says: ``Travel to America? No thanks.''
  So a group of us, a large group, over 50 in the last Congress, put 
legislation together saying: Let's find a unique way to promote our 
country. We put together the Travel Promotion Act. And by the way, 
unlike almost every other piece of legislation that comes to the floor 
of the Senate, that costs money and would increase the deficit if not 
paid for, the Congressional Budget Office says: Enacting this bill 
would reduce budget deficits by $429 million--that is almost a half a 
billion dollars--between 2010 and 2019. So this would reduce the budget 
deficit. We are not talking about something that spends money. This 
reduces the budget deficit over 10 years by nearly $500 million.
  We fund this, in large part, with a small $10 fee from the visa 
waiver countries in which visitors are traveling to our country. As I 
have described, Australia has a $37 departure fee; Guatemala, $30; the 
Philippines, $15; United Kingdom, $80 to $160. The fact is, this goes 
on all around the world. We are proposing a very modest fee on visitors 
from visa waiver countries.
  Newspapers all across this country have supported this. Dallas 
Morning News: The Travel Promotion Act is a sensible first step toward 
putting the welcome mat back on America's doorstep.
  The Detroit Free Press: Doesn't it make sense to encourage, at no 
cost to taxpayers, foreign visitors to come here and leave us some of 
their money? There is no good reason not to pass this bill.
  The Los Angeles Times: Considering that the U.S. spends hundreds of 
millions of dollars on public diplomacy with dubious results, and 
nearly nothing promoting tourism, we might do well to invest a little 
money in wooing travelers.
  The Sacramento Bee: This country needs to reclaim its status as a 
global magnet for visitors, even in the post-9/11 climate. And Congress 
could help by passing the Travel Promotion Act by the end of this year.
  This ought to be something that we bring up and almost pass by 
unanimous consent. Guess what kind of a tortured journey this bill has 
been on. First and foremost, the bill is reported to the floor--and you 
have got to have a motion to proceed. You cannot just bring it to the 
floor. If someone insists, no, no, you have got to have a debate and 
then a vote on whether you should even proceed to the bill.
  So we did. Not because we should have had to do that, just because 
someone said: You know what, we are going to decide to be a human set 
of brake pads and slow down everything that happens in the Senate and 
prevent anybody from getting anything done.
  So on a travel bill, the Travel Promotion Act, that actually reduces 
the Federal budget deficit and tries to attract international visitors 
to our country, which would be a good thing--there is a lot here to see 
and experience, and almost everyone who leaves after visiting the 
United States of America has an unbelievably good opinion of what we 
are about. This is a great country, yes, with a lot of attractions, but 
a country whose culture and character is something we need to exhibit 
to everybody in this world to say: Here is who we are. Here is what 
America is about. Here is the grand idea that is the most successful 
democracy in history. Come here. Visit here. Become a part of what we 
are experiencing on your international travels.
  We are not doing that now. But we suggest we should. The bill that is 
broadly bipartisan to do that is to be brought to the floor of the 
Senate. We are told: No, you cannot do that. First you must have a 
debate, and then a vote on the motion to proceed.
  So we have to file what is called a cloture petition, which takes 2 
days to ripen. You lose 2 days. Then we have a vote. And the vote is 90 
to 3 in favor of it. The implication there is we should not have had to 
have a vote and waste a couple of days. But we did.
  Then, after the cloture vote, 90 to 3, we were told: No, you cannot 
go to the bill yet, there is 30 hours postcloture, and we insist on 
burning all 30 hours postcloture.
  We had 2 days for the cloture petition, then a 90-to-3 vote, then we 
had 30 hours wasted time postcloture. Why? Because someone insisted 
upon it. And so now all of a sudden we are on the bill.
  Well, last Thursday and Friday, I worked, Senator Reid worked, and 
many others worked to see, all right, we are on the bill. Now can we 
figure out what kind of amendments are going to be offered.
  We had a discussion over there in the middle of the aisle with 
Senators McConnell, Reid, Martinez, and others. We agreed we would 
begin with amendments on each side. Perhaps we started with three and 
two, then we said five amendments on the Republican side and three 
amendments here at least to start the process.
  Can you give us a list of your amendments? We got a list of the 
amendments, five amendments on what is called the TARP program, the 
Troubled Asset Relief Program, having nothing at all to do with this 
bill. We said: That is fine. Okay. You want to have five debates and 
votes on TARP. Okay.
  Here are our three amendments, two of which had to do with the 
studies. The other was an amendment by Senator Sanders that said to the 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission that we want them to use all of 
the authority they now have, plus any emergency authority, use the 
authority you now have to start finding a way to shine the light on 
these unbelievable speculators who are running up the price of 
gasoline. Not a very controversial amendment. It does not give the CFTC 
any new authority. It deals with the question of the runup in the price 
of gasoline. It does not give anyone any new authority. But the 
Republican side said: Nope, we are not going to allow you to offer that 
amendment. We are going to tell you which amendments we intend to 
offer. We said, okay, that is fine, whatever amendments you have, God 
bless you, go ahead and offer them.
  But they say, but you cannot describe to us a set of amendments, 
three, five to three, and if the three includes an amendment to try to 
see if you can shut down some of the excess speculation using the 
authority that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission now has, we are 
not willing to do that.
  Most people would listen to all of this and say, it is the same old 
thing. Nobody can agree on anything. But, you know, in every 
circumstance where there is disagreement, there has to be someone who 
is holding out. Right? We come to the floor today without an

[[Page 15807]]

agreement on amendments, so the majority leader had to file a cloture 
petition. We have a cloture vote at 5:30 today.
  This Congress cannot even agree on tourism, for God's sake. 
Unbelievable to me. How dysfunctional can a legislative body become? 
You cannot agree on tourism.
  But let me at least talk for a minute, before I talk about the 
importance now of having a cloture vote and requiring to have a cloture 
vote on this, let me talk about what the other side objects to with an 
amendment that my colleague wants to offer. I agree that the amendment 
does not relate to the bill, but their first five amendments had 
nothing to do with the bill either. So why should the minority be 
telling the majority what kind of amendments they can offer?
  But here is the amendment. People remember when the price of oil went 
from about $40 up to $147 a barrel in day trading; went up like a Roman 
candle, then came right back down. The same hotshots, the same 
speculators, who made a fortune pushing up the price of oil, made a 
fortune on the upside, the same folks made a fortune on the downside. 
The victims are the people who drive up to the gas pump having to pay 
$4, $4.50 for gasoline.
  Let me show you what has happened. The Commodity Futures Trading 
Commission--I mean nobody knows what that is much outside of 
Washington, DC, CFTC. We have all of these acronyms. Well, it is a 
group of people who have done their level best imitation of a potted 
plant for a long time. They decided to do very little in areas where 
much was needed.
  The oil futures market is a very important market. You need to hedge, 
we understand that. The futures market is established for a very 
specific reason, and it is an important market. But speculators have 
broken the back of that market. Here is what happened. Thirty-seven 
percent of the trades in the oil futures market were by speculators in 
2000. Now it is 80 percent. That is what caused the price of oil to go 
up to $147 a barrel. They were speculating on the way up; they turned 
it and were speculating on the way down and made money on both sides.
  Before I show what has happened to the price of oil now--by the way, 
it is starting again. Demand is down because of the recession, and the 
supply of oil is up, and the price is going up.
  What does that tell you? It tells you the same shenanigans are going 
on. And the CFTC, which is supposed to be our agency, that is the 
referee with the striped shirt and the whistle, supposed to be watching 
what is going on and taking action to shut some of it down, once again, 
not much going on. Senator Sanders says: We ought to ask them, at least 
ask them, to use all of their authority to shut it down.
  We have a government agency called the EIA, Environmental Information 
Administration. It costs about $100 million a year, actually over $100 
million a year. Their job is to know everything there is to know about 
energy, and to make the best estimates they can make. I want to show a 
chart that shows the runup to the $147 a barrel for oil.
  This chart shows 2007-2008. The yellow line is the estimates by our 
agency, the EIA, saying: Here is where we think the price of oil is 
going. Each yellow line--this, for example, is January 2008. They said: 
Here is where we think the price of oil is headed. March 2008: Here is 
where we think it is headed. Of course, this was the price.
  One would ask the question, and reasonably so: Who are these best 
informed people at EIA who are supposed to give us an estimate of what 
is going on? Well, what is going on now? What we see now is an EIA 
projection made in January of this year, the yellow line.
  The EIA says: Here is where we think oil is going to go now. But, of 
course, anybody who drives a car and has stopped at a gas pump recently 
understands what is happening to the price of oil. The price of oil is 
something now over $70 a barrel, on the march from $37 a barrel. That 
is happening at a time when demand is down and supply is up.
  I taught economics in college ever so briefly. But the supply-demand 
curve is something you can learn the first day. When supply is up and 
demand is down, price is not supposed to go up. If it is going up, 
there is something wrong. There is something happening. And that is 
what is happening now.
  Where will it go? Will it go to $90? I notice one of our big 
investment banks thought it would go to $90. I would love, if I had 
subpoena capability, to find the position that investment bank was 
holding in oil futures as they made that announcement. But that is an 
aside for another day.
  The question is: Is it reasonable to have an amendment by Senator 
Sanders to say: We want the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to use 
all of their authority to try to understand what is going on? The other 
side says: Absolutely not. We do not intend to allow you to offer that 
amendment.
  I mean, I do not understand why. Whose interests would they be 
supporting or protecting? The speculators? Big investment banks? Those 
who are holding oil offshore in ships? Those investment banks that 
actually have bought oil storage for the first time in history to take 
oil out of supply and store it, and wait as the price goes up and make 
money? Is that whose interests are at stake here?
  Let me come back to the point I was making. We tried very hard 
Thursday and Friday to reach an agreement on amendments on both sides. 
We said: Absolutely. You want amendments. You want all five amendments 
on the TARP program? It has nothing to do with the bill. By all means, 
feel free. Start offering. We are ready. And the other side said: Well, 
you give us all we want, but we do not intend to agree to much of 
anything you want, kind of a one-way agreement that they would have 
known was destined to fail.
  Again, I do not understand how we have gotten to a point on a piece 
of legislation that should be so noncontroversial, sufficient so that 
with a 90-to-3 vote on the motion to proceed, it is brought to the 
floor of the Senate, a bill that had over 50 cosponsors last year here 
in the Senate, a bill that deals with travel and promotion of travel 
and tourism, that we now have this unbelievable impasse.
  We had to have 2 days with a cloture motion on a motion to proceed 
that passed 90 to 3 and then have 30 hours postcloture. Then we were 
going on this merry-go-round last Thursday and Friday with an absurd 
proposition that the minority wants to decide what amendments the 
majority can have, despite the fact that the majority says: You can 
have whatever amendments you want. They must have missed the last 
couple of elections. They apparently think they run the Senate.
  What runs the Senate is consensus--consensus by people who care about 
getting things done on important issues. If you cannot do something on 
tourism, how on Earth are you going to do something on health care and 
energy and climate change and a lot of things that matter a lot about 
this country and the future? If you cannot do a tourism bill, what can 
you do? It is pretty unbelievable to me.
  I know we can have people come and explain, even until they are 
completely out of breath, why they object to everything. I just 
described: Senate GOP still saying no. Democrats need to know when 
bills are coming up, we are going to extend the debate as long as we 
can--on and on and on.
  How about just picking out one or two little issues--one or two 
issues--that would advance the country's interests and say: Do you know 
what, on this issue we will just park the politics at home. We have to 
leave the politics back in the office. We will come to the floor and 
say: What is good for the country?
  I will tell you what is good for the country here on this issue; that 
is, in a very troubled world, where a lot of people have looked askance 
at this country and we have gotten some bad reputation around here and 
there--and some bad information about America--I will tell you what is 
good: to have people come to this country and just be around for a bit 
and experience this great country of ours and understand when they hit 
our shores this is a citadel of freedom. You can do everything you 
want.

[[Page 15808]]

  This is an unbelievable place, and we need people in the world to 
understand it and to understand especially this: You are welcome to 
come here. We want you here. We want you to come and see and sample and 
understand what America is about. That is what this bill is. If we 
cannot even agree on that, how on Earth will we agree on the big issues 
of the day?
  We will have a cloture vote at 5:30. My guess is, the minority will 
say: We believe this vote needs to be a leadership vote. All of you 
have to vote against cloture because we haven't offered the first 
amendment. Do you know why you have not offered the first amendment? 
Because you would not agree on anything. We tried Thursday. We tried 
Friday. You would not agree on anything. We agreed on all your 
amendments, and you would not agree on a thing. So here we are--I and 
my Democratic and Republican cosponsors on this bill we have worked on 
now for 2 years--coming now to a cloture vote in which some will say to 
others: You can't vote for cloture because we haven't had any 
amendments.
  I hope perhaps between now--10 to 4 o'clock--and 5:30, if there are 
well-meaning people in this Chamber who really wish to make progress 
for our country, we could have an agreement on amendments and then just 
go forward. Let's do that.
  I was there when Senator Reid said to the minority leader: Look, 
let's just at least start. We do not have to have a whole list of all 
the amendments. Let's just start. If you want the first five 
amendments--whatever it is you want--bring them on. We will have the 
amendments. And we will give you three of ours. Let's just start the 
process.
  We could not even get that done Thursday and Friday.
  The American people deserve better than that from all of us. They 
deserve a Senate that works. And if the Senate cannot work on 
bipartisan legislation dealing with tourism, can you name a subject 
where it will work?
  My hope is that in the next hour and a half, perhaps some will come 
to the floor who have the interest and the ability to reach an 
agreement, so we can begin the amendment process and finish the bill 
this week. We can do that. We should not defeat this cloture motion. In 
fact, we should vitiate the motion--if we could get the leadership of 
the other side to come to the floor and say: We agree with what you 
proposed last week.
  Let's start. Let's start now. Let's have some amendments tonight and 
have some votes. We can do that.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Arizona.


                     Colombia Free Trade Agreement

  Mr. KYL. Mr. President, next week President Uribe of Colombia will be 
meeting with President Obama at the White House. I hope this meeting 
will serve as an opportunity to get the Colombia Free Trade Agreement 
back on track.
  I support the Colombia Free Trade Agreement because of its importance 
to Colombia but also because I think it is important for U.S. firms to 
gain access to the markets of fast-growing developing nations abroad. 
Our economy will revive only if we create jobs. Enacting this Colombia 
Free Trade Agreement will help to do that.
  America's two-way trade with Colombia reached $18 billion in 2007, 
making Colombia our fourth largest trading partner in Latin America and 
our largest export market for U.S. agricultural products in South 
America.
  Exports are the only major sector of the private economy actually 
making positive contributions to U.S. economic growth. In my own State 
of Arizona, nearly 80 percent of all of our manufactured goods were 
exported. On average, net exports added more than 1 percentage point 
overall to our economic growth last year, in part offsetting the 
negative consequences of the housing downturn. So if U.S. manufacturers 
and farmers were not able to sell their products abroad, the current 
economic downturn would be much worse.
  Enacting the Colombia Free Trade Agreement would help more than 
10,000 U.S. companies that export to Colombia, 8,500 of which are small 
and medium-sized firms, by opening a significant new export market.
  America's market is already open to imports from Colombia. In 2008, 
for example, over 90 percent of U.S. imports from Colombia entered the 
United States duty free under our most-favored-nation tariff rates and 
various preference programs, such as the Andean Trade Preference Act 
and the Generalized System of Preferences. However, more than 97 
percent of U.S. exports to Colombia are subject to duties that range 
from 14 to 50 percent. Once the agreement is approved, over 80 percent 
of U.S. consumer and industrial exports to Colombia will enter duty 
free. So each day Congress does not approve the Colombia free-trade 
deal, the U.S. exporters pay $2 million in unnecessary tariffs.
  Let me review very briefly the events of the past 2 years to 
understand the current state of affairs.
  On May 10, 2007, Democrats and Republicans agreed to a framework that 
modifies future trade agreements to include provisions improving labor 
and environmental standards in order to move the Peru, Colombia, and 
South Korea free-trade agreements.
  After the Peru Trade Promotion Agreement was signed into law in 
December 2007, Democrats broke the deal with us in order to extract 
more concessions. This time, they said that in exchange for passing the 
Colombia Free Trade Agreement, the Bush administration would need to 
accept an expansion of TAA benefits by increasing the refundability of 
the health care tax credit from 65 to 80 percent, expanding the TAA 
eligibility to service workers, and doubling the mandatory funding for 
worker retraining from $220 to $440 million.
  When the Bush administration tried to jump-start the process last 
year by introducing the Colombia Free Trade Agreement, Speaker Pelosi 
responded by unilaterally rescinding Colombia's fast-track authority, 
essentially killing any chance of moving the agreement.
  We missed another opportunity to enact the Colombia Free Trade 
Agreement on the stimulus bill. Although the majority did find room to 
enact a multibillion-dollar trade adjustment assistance expansion--that 
is what T-A-A stands for--which was considered a prerequisite to any 
additional free-trade agreement, now that it is the law, we are not 
moving forward on the Colombia Free Trade Agreement.
  Interestingly, the President's budget would permanently extend trade 
adjustment assistance at a cost of $4.6 billion over 10 years. But it 
does not include one dollar to implement any of the pending trade 
agreements such as those with Colombia, Panama, or South Korea.
  I urge my colleagues to use President Uribe's visit as an opportunity 
to move forward and renew this Nation's commitment to trade not only to 
assist an important American ally that needs our help but to enact a 
true stimulus bill that will promote American manufacturing exports and 
create badly needed jobs. I ask that we get our staffs to begin working 
together to develop a plan to ensure passage of the Colombia Free Trade 
Agreement.
  Finally, let me respond briefly to Democrats' charges that Colombia 
has not done enough to protect human rights. The Colombian Government 
has demobilized and brought to justice over 31,000 members from 35 
paramilitary groups, principally from the AUC or the United Self-
Defense Forces of Colombia. In addition, more than 10,500 members of 
the far-left insurgent groups FARC, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of 
Colombia, and ELN, which is the National Liberation Army, have chosen 
to demobilize, individually leaving their units and turning themselves 
in to Colombian authorities. The Colombian Government is also providing 
protection to over 10,600 individuals. The largest protection program 
is run by the Ministry of Interior and Justice and provides protection 
to more than 9,400 individuals, including 1,900 trade union members. Of 
the program's $39.5 million budget, one-third--over $13 million--goes 
to protect trade unionists. As a result,

[[Page 15809]]

President Uribe has improved the security situation in Colombia 
dramatically. Kidnappings are down by 83 percent, terror attacks are 
down by 76 percent, homicides have decreased by 40 percent, and 
homicides against trade unionists have dropped by twice as much--over 
80 percent.
  This is important progress by the Government of Colombia. It is an 
important ally of the United States. It deserves our support. And, as 
importantly, exporters in the United States deserve congressional 
support, enabling them to export their products without the kinds of 
barriers that currently exist.
  The trade agreement is in our best interest, and I hope my colleagues 
will insist that very soon we get the Colombia Free Trade Agreement 
back on track so this important legislation can pass the Congress, be 
signed into law, and begin to help our economy generate jobs and 
stimulate economic growth. It is an important agreement that has 
languished far too long, and we need to get it moving again.
  Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Hagan). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                              Health Care

  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, as the debate over health care reform 
continues, a number of different approaches have now emerged. But one 
thing unites us: All of us agree health care reform is needed. The 
question is, what kind of reform--a reform that cuts costs and expands 
access or a so-called reform that leads to a government takeover where 
premiums are increased but health care is delayed, denied, and 
rationed? The American people want reform, but they want reform that 
allows them to keep their current insurance while preserving the 
freedoms, choices, and quality of care they now enjoy. That is why 
Republicans have proposed a series of reforms to lower costs and 
improve access, without--without--destroying what people like about our 
current health care system.
  As it turns out, President Obama has said he is open to some of the 
ideas Republicans have put forward, such as the need to reform our 
medical liability laws to discourage junk lawsuits and the need to 
encourage wellness and prevention programs that have proven to be 
effective in cutting costs and improving care. In fact, during a speech 
last week to the American Medical Association, the President discussed 
one particular wellness and prevention program at the Safeway 
supermarket chain, which has dramatically cut that company's health 
care costs and employee premiums. The President even said he would be 
open to helping businesses across the Nation adopt wellness and 
prevention programs such as the Safeway plan. Yet the bill the 
Democrats are trying to rush through the Senate would actually ban this 
program from being copied and implemented by other companies. That 
makes absolutely no sense.
  All last week, we heard eye-popping cost estimates for health care 
proposals coming out of Capitol Hill--proposals that wouldn't even 
solve the entire problem but would bury us deeper and deeper in debt. 
If the goal is to decrease costs, why wouldn't Democrats in Congress 
support a plan we know has been effective in doing so--especially if 
the President himself supports it? One would think this would be an 
easy bipartisan feature of any Democratic plan.
  According to Safeway CEO Steve Burd, Safeway's per capita health care 
costs have remained flat even as the per capita health care costs of 
most American companies have increased by nearly 30 percent since 
Safeway implemented its wellness and prevention plan back in 2005.
  Safeway's plan has also reduced the health care costs for employees 
and their families by offering incentives for workers who adopt 
healthier lifestyles. Those employees who choose to participate in the 
plan are tested for tobacco usage, for a healthy weight, and for their 
blood pressure and cholesterol levels. Employees who pass these tests 
are given discounts on their premiums.
  For example, if employees pass all four tests, their annual premiums 
are reduced by $780 for individuals and $1,560 for families. If 
employees miss their goals the first time, the company provides support 
for improvement and financial incentives for those who make progress.
  All of this makes health care more affordable, and it also helps to 
improve the health and quality of life of Safeway's workers. The 
company's obesity and smoking rates are now about 70 percent of the 
national average, and employees like the plan so much that 76 percent 
of them want more incentives that reward healthy behavior.
  Safeway executives estimate if the United States had adopted its 
approach in 2005--4 years ago--the country's direct health care bill 
would be $550 billion less than it is now--if we had simply adopted the 
Safeway approach 4 years ago.
  The Safeway program has proven so successful that the company wants 
to increase its incentives for rewarding healthy behavior. 
Unfortunately, current laws restrict it from doing so, but instead of 
offering legislation that corrects the problem, the so-called reform 
bill being pushed through the HELP Committee would do the opposite. It 
would actually prohibit companies from implementing the Safeway 
program.
  Let me repeat that: The bill that is currently being pushed through 
the HELP Committee doesn't let companies consider an employee's health 
status when providing insurance--meaning employers would be banned from 
rewarding healthy behavior as Safeway does and offering lower premiums 
to workers who manage their chronic diseases, eliminate high-risk 
behaviors such as smoking, or lose weight. In other words, it would 
prohibit companies from implementing programs that have been proven to 
cut health care costs. I thought that was the point of health care 
reform.
  When it comes to making health care more affordable, we should all 
support ideas that work. Americans want health care ideas that cut 
costs and improve care. The Safeway model is an excellent place to 
start. The President supports it, Republicans support it, and Safeway's 
experience has shown that it works. If Democrats in Congress are 
serious about making health care more affordable, they should support 
it too. Instead of the rush-and-spend approach that has led to a 
chaotic process and hugely expensive health care proposals that don't 
even address the whole problem, Democrats should slow down and consider 
ideas that have been shown to not only be effective in delivering care 
but also effective in reducing costs.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. ALEXANDER. 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. ALEXANDER. Madam President, in about an hour, we will be asked to 
vote on whether the Senate can continue to do what the Senate is 
supposed to do and that is to amend and debate. When I ran for the 
Senate, the people of Tennessee sent me up here to represent them. They 
expected that when I got here, I would have a chance to say what I had 
to say on their behalf, and sometimes what I think may not be so 
important but what they think is important. The people of Tennessee 
know the history of the Senate--as Senator Byrd has so often said--is 
distinguished only by a couple things. One is virtually an unlimited 
right to amend, and another is a virtually unlimited right to debate.
  What is going to happen at 5:30 is we are going to be asked to vote 
to cut off amendments and cut off debate. A vote of yes will be a vote 
to obstruct our right to amend, obstruct our right to debate and to 
make it impossible for

[[Page 15810]]

me to represent the people of Tennessee, who voted for me with the idea 
that I might be able to do that.
  Let me explain a little more what I mean by that. A great many people 
write books about America, but unquestionably I think the best regarded 
such book is a book by Alexis de Tocqueville, entitled ``Democracy in 
America.'' When the young Frenchman came to this country, he ran across 
Davy Crockett and all sorts of people. When he wrote about what he 
thought might be, in the long term, the greatest danger to the American 
democracy, he said he thought it might be the ``tyranny of the 
majority.'' He was afraid that in our type of system, what might happen 
is that the majority would get control and run over the minority.
  The Senate was one of the institutions created to avoid that. So when 
we get a situation where we have only 40 or 41 Republican Senators and 
57 or 58 or 56 or more Democratic Senators, the minority always has a 
right to make sure there is no tyranny of the majority. It has been the 
other way and it will be again; when I first came here the Republicans 
held the majority, and we had 55 Republicans at one point. So a vote of 
yes at 5:30 is a vote to obstruct the right of Senators to represent 
the people who hired them to come and offer amendments and speak for 
them.
  Ironically, this vote will give the majority the right to suppress a 
majority view--because what is the issue that is attempting to be 
suppressed? The issue is whether we ought to get the government in 
Washington out of the automobile business. I think most people in the 
country are thinking we are having too many Washington takeovers. That 
is not the American way. We know we have had trouble in this country 
economically, but taking over banks, insurance companies, student 
loans, car companies, and now maybe taking over health care--the 
American people don't like that.
  We have a series of amendments to be offered--both Republican and 
some with bipartisan support--which would say: Let's get the government 
out of the automobile business and put it back in the hands of the 
American people and the free enterprise system of America. That is a 
majority view in this country.
  According to an AutoPacific Survey in the Nashville Tennessean, 81 
percent of Americans polled agree that the faster the government gets 
out of the automotive business the better; 95 percent disagreed that 
the government is a good overseer of corporations, such as General 
Motors and Chrysler; 93 percent disagree that having the government in 
charge of General Motors and Chrysler will result in cars and trucks 
Americans want to buy. Most Americans don't want a car that a United 
States Senator engineered, designed, and sold. That is not what we are 
here for. They know better than that.
  According to a Rasmussen Poll of June 13 and 14, 80 percent of those 
polled believe the government should sell the government stake in the 
auto companies to private investors ``as soon as possible.'' And 71 
percent of those polled believe the government should sell their stake 
to private investors as soon as possible.
  According to the Wall Street Journal on June 18, nearly 70 percent of 
those surveyed said they had concerns about Federal intervention into 
the economy, including the President's decision to take an ownership 
interest in General Motors, put limits on executive compensation, and 
the prospect of more government involvement in health care. We have a 
situation where the President is calling the mayor of Detroit to get 
into the question of whether the headquarters of General Motors is 
going to be there or in Warren, MI. We have the chairman of the House 
bailout committee--the House Financial Services Committee--calling the 
president of General Motors saying: Don't close the warehouse in my 
district. And all of us in Congress are saying: Please build a car in 
my district. We will have some Congressmen saying: Don't buy a battery 
from South Korea; buy one made in my district. We have automobile 
company executives driving to Washington in their congressionally 
approved hybrid cars to spend 4 hours testifying and then drive home. 
How many cars do they design, build, and make while doing this? The 
American people know the car companies cannot compete if they have 435 
congressional political meddlers, 100 senators, plus a whole 
administration, trying to tell them how to compete in a very complex 
business.
  Senator Bennett of Utah and I, cosponsored by the Republican leader, 
Senator Kyl, and others, have a bill called the Auto Stock for Every 
Taxpayer Act. We would like to offer it as an amendment this week and 
get a vote on it. The Auto Stock for every Taxpayer amendment would say 
that the Treasury can't use any more TARP funds to bail out General 
Motors or Chrysler. Also, while the government owns stock in these 
companies, the Secretary of the Treasury, or his designee, has a 
fiduciary responsibility to the taxpayer to maximize returns on that 
investment. And most importantly, our amendment says that within a year 
after General Motors comes out of bankruptcy, the government should 
distribute its stock to the 120 million Americans who pay taxes on 
April 15.
  In other words, let's have a big stock distribution, the same way 
Procter & Gamble did when it distributed stock in Clorox or the same 
way other companies do every year. We have a core business, the car 
company, that has nothing to do with the owner, the United States 
government, and we should give the car company to the owners--the 120 
million people who pay taxes. That is what we should do. And the 
rationale is: I paid for it, I should own it. That is the first 
amendment we want to offer.
  Senator Corker, with a couple of cosponsors, including Senator Warner 
from the other side of the aisle, has another idea, which I am glad to 
support. It is a little different approach to the same idea. He would 
create a limited-liability corporation to manage the government 
ownership stake in companies in which the government owns at least 20 
percent. By the fall of this year that will probably include AIG, 
Citigroup, and General Motors. The government's assets would be placed 
in a trust and managed by three independent, nonpolitical trustees. The 
trustees would have to liquidate the government's interest by December 
24, 2011. And there is a waiver process in case the trustees think 
there is a problem with that deadline.
  That is a responsible, interesting approach. Why shouldn't Senator 
Corker and Senator Warner have a chance to offer that amendment? That 
is what the majority of people in America would like to see done.
  Senator Johanns, a distinguished former Governor of Nebraska, has his 
Free Enterprise Act of 2009. He has 29 cosponsors. He would like to 
require congressional approval before the Federal Government can use 
TARP funds to acquire ownership of an entity through stock.
  Senator Thune, a member of the Republican leadership, has the 
Government Ownership Exit Plan Act of 2009. He would require the 
Treasury to sell any ownership of a private entity by July 1, 2010, and 
prohibit the government from acquiring any additional ownership stake 
in private companies.
  Well, I think you can get the drift, Madam President. We have a 
number of Senators, mostly from this side but some cosponsored from the 
other side, who say that the American people are tired of Washington 
takeovers. They know cars aren't going to get better in this country if 
the government is meddling with them and designing them and building 
them and making them. I can just imagine what we will have if we 
meddle. We will have a purple polka dot car that gets 50 miles per 
gallon and will have a windmill on top and a solar panel on the side, 
and it will have this part made in this Congressman's district and that 
part made in that Senator's State, and it probably won't run 5 miles. 
Then we will lower the price to get people to buy it, all the while 
losing money, losing competition, and putting real competitors out of 
business. And then we will have no American automobile industry left. 
So

[[Page 15811]]

we need to get the government out of the car business and stop the 
Washington takeover. And over 80 percent of the American people agree.
  So what are we doing in the Senate? We are going to vote at 5:30 to 
say: No, Senators. No, Senator Corker. No, Senator Warner. No, Senator 
Alexander. No, Senator Bennett. We are going to say no to the other 
Senators, you can't continue to debate. You can't continue to offer 
your amendments. We are going to obstruct your right to do that. We are 
going to keep you from representing the people of Tennessee, the people 
of Utah, or the other people you were sent here to represent. We are 
going to stop the debate; stop the amendment.
  That is the tyranny of the majority that Alexis de Tocqueville 
envisioned. That is not the way the Senate has been running this year. 
This year in the Senate, Senator Reid has made a good-faith effort, and 
Republican Senators appreciate that, in saying we are going to have 
some amendments. That means we are going to have some amendments 
offered on which some of us don't really want to vote. There have been 
some amendments I really didn't want to vote on, including some offered 
by people on my side of the aisle, but that is what we do in the 
Senate. So why are we doing this? Why are we saying suddenly, no 
amendments?
  So I would hope Senators would agree that at 5:30 we should vote no. 
We should vote no. And by voting no, we would be saying: Let's continue 
to debate. Let's continue to amend. A vote yes is a vote to obstruct. A 
vote no is to continue to debate and continue to amend. And the issue 
is, shall we take the government ownership of automobile companies and 
put it, as soon as it is practicable, back in the hands of the American 
people, where it belongs, in our free enterprise system? That is the 
American way.
  We have at least four different options. We have a whole menu here. 
If you don't like the Alexander-Bennet amendment, vote for the Corker 
amendment. If you don't like that, vote for one of the other 
amendments. We have four ways to go about it, all carefully thought 
out, all in front of everybody. Why don't we do that? That is what the 
Senate does.
  So I prefer the way the Senate has operated pretty much all the time, 
up to today, which is to say: Senators, offer your amendments, take 
your votes. Today is an aberration--a change away from the way the 
Senate should function. My old friend, the late Alex Haley, author of 
Roots, used to say: Find the good and praise it. Well, I can find 
plenty of good in the way the majority leader has conducted the Senate 
this year by allowing debate and amendments. I would consider this an 
aberration.
  I hope we will vote to continue to amend, to continue to debate, and 
get the Senate back to the practice we had most of this year, which is 
to say: If you have an amendment, Senator, bring it on over, call it 
up, and we will vote on it, and then we will go on to the next thing.
  Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the 
Record an article from the American Spectator entitled ``Are There 
Obamashares in Your Future?''
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

                 Are There Obamashares in Your Future?

                          (By Peter Hannaford)

       As they were steering General Motors into bankruptcy at 
     early this month, the President Goodwrench team arranged for 
     the United Auto Workers' pension fund to get 30 percent of 
     the stock when the ``new'' company comes out at the other 
     end. Bond holders will get 10 percent and the U.S. Government 
     will keep 60 percent for itself.
       If the ``new'' GM becomes profitable it may eventually pay 
     back the $50 billion the government has advanced to it, but 
     the term ``government ownership'' lacks the ring of 
     legitimacy that ``taxpayer ownership'' has.
       U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-T) wants to do something 
     about that. He is the lead sponsor for the Auto Stock for 
     Every Taxpayer bill which would distribute the government's 
     stock in GM (and Chrysler, too) to the 120 million Americans 
     who paid income taxes on April 15. He says, ``That is the 
     fastest way to get ownership of the auto companies out of the 
     hands of meddling Washington politicians and back into the 
     hands of Americans in the market place.''
       This is no voice in the wilderness. A recent AutoPacific 
     poll reports that 81 percent of Americans agreed that ``the 
     faster the government gets out of the automotive business, 
     the better.'' Conversely, 95 percent of those polled 
     disagreed with the statement, ``. . . the government is a 
     good overseer of corporations such as General Motors and 
     Chrysler.'' And 93 percent disagreed that ``having the 
     government in charge [of the two automakers] will result in 
     cars and trucks that Americans will want to buy.'' So much 
     for the flimsy cars with which President Goodwrench wants to 
     fill the market.
       To make sure his proposal to put automaker stock in the 
     hands of actual taxpayers gets the attention it deserves, 
     Sen. Alexander the other day began a program to draw 
     attention to the downsides of Washington management of auto 
     companies. He introduced on the floor of the Senate his ``Car 
     Czar'' awards. As he put it, ``It's a service to taxpayers 
     from America's new automotive headquarters, Washington, 
     D.C.''
       The Car Czar awards, he adds, ``. . . will be conferred on 
     Washington meddlers who make it harder for the auto companies 
     your government owns to compete in the world marketplace.'' 
     The first award went to Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) ``for 
     interfering in the operation of General Motors.''
       Rep. Frank is Chairman of the House Financial Services 
     Committee, well known for his oft-denied roll in pressuring 
     Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to push banks to make risky home 
     loans.
       Two weeks ago, it turns out, Mr. Frank learned that General 
     Motors, as part of its restructuring plan, would close a 
     parts distribution warehouse in Norton, Massachusetts by 
     year's end. Despite the President Goodwrench team's constant 
     pressing of GM to cut more and more, anything in Barney 
     Frank's district is out of bounds if he has anything to say 
     about it, and he did. He put in a call to GM CEO Frederick 
     ``Fritz'' Henderson and--voila--the Norton warehouse was 
     saved. This warehouse has 90 employees. We can assume that 
     they and their spouses will show their gratitude to Mr. Frank 
     at the polls in November next year. That's 180 votes. He 
     should really think in larger terms. If he were to sponsor a 
     House version of Sen. Alexander's Auto Stock for Every 
     Taxpayer legislation, think of the thousands of grateful 
     citizens in his district who would support him. Indeed, they 
     might even demand that the local federal building be named 
     after him.

  Mr. ALEXANDER. I thank the Chair, I yield the floor, and 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. BROWN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BROWN. Madam President, I appreciate the comments of the Senator 
from Tennessee. I don't know how the vote will come out at 5:30 today, 
but I do know it is almost unanimous--perhaps it is unanimous on this 
side and the other side of the aisle--that we all want the auto 
industry to return wholly to the private sector; that this was an 
extraordinary situation.
  I represent, as the Senator from Tennessee represents, a lot of 
autoworkers--in his case, union and nonunion alike. I have a good many 
nonunion autoworkers in my State--union and nonunion alike--and I think 
all those companies--certainly GM and Chrysler workers and people in 
the community--want this industry back on its feet and want it run by 
the private investors, as it should be.


                             Cuyahoga River

  Madam President, today marks the 40th anniversary the Cuyahoga River 
in Cleveland burned. The June 22, 1969, fire wasn't the first or the 
biggest on the Cuyahoga or in rivers all over the country in those days 
when rivers were full of chemicals and all kinds of discharge that 
could catch fire from a spark from a railroad train passing through or 
from something else passing over the river. But 40 years ago, that fire 
in the Cuyahoga River was a catalyst that helped create the 
Environmental Protection Agency and then the landmark Clean Water Act. 
The fire helped push the government to recognized its responsibility to 
safeguard our environment. When the EPA was established in July of 
1970--as I said, in large part the impetus came from that fire on the 
Cuyahoga in 1969--it marked a sustained effort by citizens

[[Page 15812]]

to demand that their government protect our health and sustain our 
environment. Like so many times throughout our Nation's history, 
citizen activism served as a vehicle for change.
  Prior to that fire in 1969--I was born in 1952--I remember as a small 
child and as a teenager going 60 miles north of where I grew up to the 
shores of Lake Erie and seeing dead fish along the lake and seeing what 
was left of a wonderful living lake--one of the Great Lakes. The 
greatest natural resources of this country are the five Great Lakes. I 
remember seeing the pollution and the damage that came from the 
effluent that human beings, that individuals and farmers and industry 
dumped into that lake and its rivers over many, many years.
  Galvanized by Rachel Carson's 1962 ``Silent Spring,'' the 
environmental movement engaged the public and educated elected 
officials and industry leaders about threats to human safety and 
environmental sustainability. That citizen call to action spurred 
decades worth of environmental laws that have improved our quality of 
life and improved the health of our Nation's streams, lakes, and 
rivers.
  When the Clean Water Act was passed in 1972, only about 30 percent of 
the Nation's waters were safe for fishing and swimming. Think about 
that. In 1972, fewer than a third of the Nation's waters were safe for 
fishing and swimming. Two decades later, the EPA reported that 56 
percent of rivers and lakes meet safety standards--much progress but 
clearly not nearly enough.
  As a result of the Clean Water Act, thousands of communities around 
the Nation benefit from wastewater treatment plants, improved habitats, 
increased fish stocks, and safer recreational waters. Just as the 
health of our Nation's water has improved, so too has the river in my 
community--the Cuyahoga River.
  The Cuyahoga, which is a Native-American word meaning ``crooked 
river,'' winds through northeast Ohio. In fact, when you land at the 
Cleveland airport, you can see the river winding its way right through 
downtown Cleveland. So there are banks of the river through several 
miles as it goes into Cuyahoga County. It ultimately flows into Lake 
Erie in the city of Cleveland.
  When scientists began studying the fish populations of the Cuyahoga, 
they found that only a few species were able to survive in the polluted 
waters. Many of the fish that remained were deformed. But after years 
of hard work by the Cuyahoga River Community Planning Organization, by 
citizens, by industry leaders, and by government agencies, more than 60 
different fishes species can now be found in the river.
  That tells you what the efforts of government can do. It took more 
than a few activists in the city of Cleveland, it took more than the 
Cleveland city health department, it took more than the Cuyahoga County 
health department, it took more than the State EPA, it took a strong 
national government and the Environmental Protection Agency--created, 
if you remember, during the Presidency of Richard Nixon, with a 
Democratic Congress. Ultimately, the creation of the Environmental 
Protection Agency, giving the Federal Government the ability to come 
in, when necessary, and mandate that local officials and local industry 
do what is needed to clean the water, to clean the air, is a lesson we 
should all learn.
  Today, as one of only 14 American Heritage Rivers, the Cuyahoga flows 
through the Cuyahoga National Park where bald eagles now nest. 
Throughout Ohio--something you would never have thought of happening 30 
years ago--our clean and abundant water supplies, such as the Cuyahoga, 
are critical to farming, clean energy development, and to regional 
economic competitiveness. Water-related recreation and tourism provide 
jobs and billions of dollars in revenues for communities and cities 
such as Lorain, cities in Lake County, cities such as my wife's 
hometown of Ashtabula, and cities such as Toledo.
  Wildlife depends on clean water and on healthy wetlands. The Cuyahoga 
will not burn anytime soon, but that doesn't really mean the hard work 
is complete. We must continue to protect our wetlands and our streams, 
to bolster our fisheries, to increase habitat restoration and 
recreational opportunities throughout the Great Lakes. It will mean the 
Federal Government will need to provide hundreds of millions of dollars 
of assistance for all five of the Great Lakes. It will mean billions of 
dollars of investment around the Great Lakes in recreation and fishing 
and in economic development and in safe drinking water. These efforts 
include reducing the number of combined sewage overflows into our 
waterways and removing the toxic sediments that were dumped in the 
rivers leading to the Great Lakes--the Maumee, the Cuyahoga, the 
Ashtabula, and others--before the Clean Water Act.
  After years of hard work, the continuing restoration of the Cuyahoga 
is a symbol of progress and a symbol of success. The community 
restoration effort on the Cuyahoga is an indication of the undeniable 
importance of the EPA and the Clean Water Act. It is a testament to 
what can be accomplished when citizens and government join to tackle a 
problem.
  In the communities that make up the Cuyahoga River watershed--among 
them Beachwood, Hudson, Euclid, Akron, and Barberton--2009 is the year 
of the Cuyahoga. But there is no reason we shouldn't dedicate every day 
to cleaner water in a more sustainable environment.
  I commend the thousands of citizens who for more than 40 years worked 
to make the Cuyahoga a source of pride for our communities. Their 
collective efforts made their government recognize its role in 
protecting our health and preserving our environment. I am confident 
that 40 years from now, my grandchildren and generations of Ohioans 
will enjoy the clean waters of the Cuyahoga River and of Lake Erie.
  Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware is recognized.
  Mr. KAUFMAN. Madam President, I rise today to draw attention to our 
efforts on the Tourism Promotion Act of 2009 and, specifically, to 
focus on my small State of Delaware.
  Coming to Delaware, the ``First State,'' one is treated to a myriad 
range of great tourist attractions from arts and culture, to sports and 
gaming, from marvelous recreation to dozens of fairs and festivals.
  In the area of arts and culture, Delaware boasts such notable stops 
as the Nemours Gardens and mansion, the home of Alfred I. DuPont and 
the now world famous DuPont Children's Hospital.
  Visitors can also tour the beautiful Bellevue State Park, the 
Delaware Art Museum, or even see a show at the DuPont Theater at the 
Hotel DuPont in Wilmington.
  The State of Delaware, the first State to ratify the Constitution, 
also has significant historical sites for tourists to enjoy.
  Visitors can view the birthplace of the DuPont Company at Delaware's 
Hagley Museum and Gardens. The luxurious, 100-room home of Henry 
Francis DuPont is also open to the public at Winterthur Museums and 
Gardens.
  Since Delaware was one of the original 13 colonies, we are proud to 
boast several pre-Revolutionary War historical sites. The Amstel House 
and the John Dickinson Mansion and Plantation can offer visitors a rare 
insight into life before the Revolution.
  Our Constitution Park offers a tribute to our ratification of the 
Constitution, made even more significant by the fact that Delaware was 
the first State to do so.
  Civil War buffs can visit Fort Delaware, where Confederate prisoners 
of war were interned, while those interested in more contemporary 
military history can visit the Dover Air Force Base's Air Mobility 
Command Museum.
  Delaware's sports and gaming opportunities are nearly limitless.
  The Dover Downs Hotel and Casino combines luxury and entertainment 
for its guests. The Delaware Park Race Track also offers excitement for 
its customers with slots and horse racing.
  NASCAR fans will love the Dover International Speedway, the famous 
``Monster Mile,'' where official

[[Page 15813]]

NASCAR races are held several times each year.
  Delaware may not boast any Major League sports teams but we are very 
proud of our Minor League baseball team, the Wilmington Blue Rocks.
  Our Blue Rocks fans are some of the most loyal in the country and a 
night out to watch them play promises fun for the entire family. For 
golf enthusiasts who do not want to lose their skills while on 
vacation, Delaware has excellent golf courses where strokes can be 
refined and perfected.
  Delaware's outdoor attractions are also world class. Killen's Pond, a 
State park since 1965, features a beautiful 66-acre millpond where 
visitors can enjoy boating and fishing.
  Delaware's greatest strength in the outdoors realm, however, is our 
beautiful beaches. These beaches stretch for miles and offer ample 
opportunity for fun on the shore and ocean. If you get enough of sand 
and surf, the boardwalk presents a wide variety of shops, restaurants, 
and entertainment to visitors. Some of Delaware's best, and tax-free, 
shopping can be found on the boardwalk.
  Our various fairs help celebrate who we are as Delawareans and also 
offer entertainment.
  The Delaware State Fair features concerts, with famous artists 
alongside rising local bands. It also provides a carnival atmosphere 
and numerous agricultural and livestock events.
  The Saint Anthony's Italian Festival, which Vice President Biden and 
I enjoyed just over a week ago, is a favorite among Delaware residents. 
Its food and entertainment always draws large crowds, and it is 
actually one of the largest ethnic festivals on the east coast.
  Other ethnic festivals that Delaware celebrates include an African-
American festival, an Indian festival, and a Greek festival, and many 
more.
  In other words, something for just about everyone.
  Those who enjoy theatrics can come to Delaware's Shakespeare 
Festival, where talented actors show their appreciation for Shakespeare 
by performing various scenes from his many plays.
  The Rehoboth Beach Independent Film Festival offers movie lovers a 
chance to view excellent films that they wouldn't get a chance to see 
in theaters.
  Delaware also boasts six wineries, including the award winning Nassau 
Valley, where visitors can enjoy excellent wine in a pleasant 
atmosphere.
  So you can see Delaware is truly a place where folks from all across 
the country can come for fun and excitement in a ``small but 
plentiful'' tourist haven.
  And I know that Delaware is not alone. All 50 States, and all the 
territories, offer something special, and I believe we should do 
everything we can to spread that message.
  That is why I am glad to be a cosponsor of the Tourism Promotion Act. 
Obviously, I hope it will help remind people across the world what 
Delaware can offer, but I believe it will help promote travel across 
the country.
  We have heard the statistics. International travel is booming, 48 
million more international trips last year than in 2000 but the United 
States is not sharing in that bounty. In fact, we lost travelers over 
that same time period.
  An estimate I saw says that if we had merely kept pace with the 
expansion of international travel, we would have seen 58 million more 
travelers since 2000. That would mean nearly 250,000 more jobs.
  In today's economy, we could sure use that help.
  However, I cannot leave the floor without commenting on another great 
State for tourism; that is, the State of the Presiding Officer, the 
State of North Carolina. I spent this weekend in North Carolina. I 
encourage North Carolina to anyone who is looking for a wonderful place 
to go for a vacation.
  I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum and ask 
unanimous consent that the time be equally divided.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The clerk 
will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, at 5:30 we will be having a cloture 
vote, and the cloture vote deals with the underlying legislation called 
the Travel Promotion Act. As I said earlier this afternoon, if the 
Congress cannot agree on something such as tourism, what is to become 
of the issues of health care, energy, climate change or so many other 
significant controversial issues that come before us?
  This underlying bill is very simple. It is bipartisan. Over 50 
Members of the Senate have cosponsored this bill in the last Congress. 
It actually reduces the Federal budget deficit by close to a half 
billion dollars. As I indicated, it should bear no controversy at all. 
It is simply the development of a public-private partnership that would 
begin to market our country, as most other countries are doing, in 
order to attract destination international tourism to our country.
  All the other countries are doing this. If you watched the golf 
tournament today--the U.S. Open--in the middle of the golf tournament, 
they broke to a commercial. It was the country of Turkey saying: Come 
to Turkey. Come and visit the wonders of Turkey.
  Well, good for Turkey. They are out trying to promote international 
tourism. But the same is true with France and Italy and Japan and India 
and Great Britain--so many other countries.
  Why are they doing that? They are doing it because it is unbelievably 
job creating to have international tourism come to your country. On 
average, an international tourist spends about $4,500 on hotels and 
cars and tourist attractions and food. So it is unbelievably job 
creating and boosting to the economy of the host country.
  But even more important than that, our country needs to do this. From 
2000 to 2008, we now have 633,000 fewer visitors per year from overseas 
than we had 8 years ago.
  Why is that the case? It is because some people believe we do not 
want them to visit our country. Quite the opposite is true. So we 
suggest, rather than to keep losing economic opportunities from 
international tourism, let's at least join the discussion and get in 
the game by promoting tourism to our country as a destination for 
international tourism. Let's at least get in the game.
  So our bill creates this public-private partnership and establishes 
the capability to begin promoting our country. Why is that important? 
Well, obviously economic development and jobs. But even more important, 
at a time when there has been so much controversy about our country and 
actions abroad, and so on, to invite people to our country and have 
them come here and visit this country is to have them leave with a 
wonderful impression about the United States of America. There just is 
not any way to visit our country and leave with a bad attitude about 
what the United States is and what it means.
  This is a great place, the greatest democracy in all of history, with 
unbelievable freedoms that many people in the world do not have. But it 
is a wonderful country, full of natural resources and wonderful people. 
To come here and visit is to leave and believe very positive things 
about our country. That, it seems to me, makes a lot of sense these 
days.
  Madam President, a colleague was on the floor just a bit ago saying, 
well, he could not vote for cloture at 5:30 because he was not allowed 
to offer his TARP amendment. Of course, TARP has nothing to do with the 
underlying bill. We said that he could offer the amendment. The rules 
of the Senate allow somebody to offer a TARP amendment. He says, 
however, that the majority--that is us--is saying: We are going to 
obstruct your right to amend the bill.
  This colleague must not have been around last Thursday and Friday 
when we were negotiating to try to get an agreement. Their side would 
offer the

[[Page 15814]]

first five amendments. We said you can offer your first five 
amendments. All of them were so-called TARP amendments--the troubled 
asset relief program. Well, TARP amendments--having nothing to do with 
tourism and travel, but that is fine. We said: OK, you can offer that.
  So how is it somebody comes to the floor of the Senate now and says 
they are being obstructed? We said: You can offer them. But then what 
they said was: Well, we want five TARP amendments, and here are your 
three amendments. One of your three amendments is one by Senator 
Sanders that we will not allow you to offer. We object to that.
  What was the Sanders amendment? It was pretty simple. The Sanders 
amendment would require that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission 
use existing authority to begin trying to tackle this question of what 
is happening in the runup of oil prices. The Commodity Futures Trading 
Commission has acted like a potted plant for a long time. Oil prices 
went to $147 a barrel in mid-2008. Yet, the CFTC was explaining to us: 
Well, that is just supply and demand.
  That is total nonsense--total nonsense. It had nothing to do with 
supply and demand. It had to do with speculators breaking that oil 
futures market. So the CFTC did nothing about it.
  Right now, the supply of oil is up; demand is down; and the price is 
going up. Once again, there is something wrong. So the Senator from 
Vermont wanted to offer an amendment. So I included it in the list of 
the amendments we would offer to the Republicans last Thursday and 
Friday, saying: OK, you want to offer five amendments that have nothing 
to do with the bill. That is fine. You can do that. Here are the three 
amendments we propose to start with.
  They said: No, no, no. You cannot offer the Sanders amendment.
  Wait a second. The minority is going to decide what the majority can 
offer? We have just said to the minority: You can offer your five TARP 
amendments that have nothing to do with this bill. That is fine. So now 
we have somebody coming to the floor this afternoon saying he has to 
vote against cloture because the majority says: We are going to 
obstruct your right to amend? Nothing could be further from the truth.
  In fact, the decision by the minority has put us in this position. So 
apparently we will have people coming to the floor of the Senate with 
the belief that somebody obstructed their right to amend the bill. But 
the TARP amendments they proposed were agreed to by us, that we would 
allow them, they were fine to be offered. Everyone thought that was the 
case. We will have some people come to the floor apparently deciding to 
vote against cloture on this bill because they say somebody obstructed 
their right to amend. That is just totally without foundation. It is 
Byzantine to me that here we are in the Senate on a piece of 
legislation called the Travel Promotion Act, which is designed to 
promote tourism, to create jobs and to promote this country's 
interests. It is widely bipartisan. It has been around now for 2\1/2\ 
years or so, with no great controversy I know of. We have before us a 
bill for which we were required to file cloture and wait 2 days for a 
cloture vote just on the motion to proceed to it. Once we got to the 
motion to proceed, we had a vote--and guess what. Ninety to three we 
said: Yes, let's proceed to it.
  Then the minority said: And, oh, by the way, no, you can't proceed 
yet because we are going to insist on the 30 hours post-cloture. So you 
have to wait 30 more hours. Total, complete, thorough delay.
  So it does not sit well with me for anybody to come here to say that 
somebody is being obstructed.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time controlled by the majority has 
expired.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that unless a 
member of the minority comes to claim time, that we be allowed to 
continue, I be allowed to continue. If a member of the minority does 
come to the Senate floor, I certainly would relinquish the time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, it does not wash at all for somebody to 
suggest somehow they have to vote against cloture because they are 
denied their right.
  Over in that aisle, on Thursday, we had a discussion--Senator Reid, 
Senator McConnell, myself, Senator Martinez--and then back and forth in 
the cloakrooms. We offered amendments back and forth just to get 
started on the bill. It was not a final list of amendments. It was just 
a way to try to get started. For all five of the amendments proposed to 
be offered by the minority, we said: Fine, they have nothing to do with 
the bill, but that is fine. If you want to offer them, offer them. But 
don't come to the floor on Monday saying the majority is obstructing 
your right to offer an amendment, which we said you could offer. How do 
you explain that contradiction?
  Again, my point: If this Congress cannot even agree on tourism, how 
is it going to agree on anything. How are we going to make progress on 
health care? How are we going to make progress on comprehensive energy 
legislation or climate change or a range of difficult international 
situations? How are we going to reach some sort of understanding that 
we represent one interest in this country, and that ought to be the 
public interest in the United States of America?
  We all work for the same people. Not everything has to be partisan. 
There is so much rancid partisanship these days. I was with the 
majority leader when we stood there. I understood what he was saying. 
He was saying to the minority: Let's get started. If you want 
amendments, fine, offer amendments. There was nothing but agreement by 
our majority leader to say to the Republicans, offer some amendments. 
Give us some amendments you want to offer and then go ahead and offer 
them.
  Mr. SANDERS. Madam President, will the Senator yield?
  Mr. DORGAN. I am happy to yield.
  Mr. SANDERS. Madam President, first, I thank my friend from North 
Dakota for his efforts on the very important issue of tourism but also 
for consistently standing up for consumers who are sick and tired of 
paying artificially high prices at the gas pumps. I wish to take this 
moment, if I might, to explain what my amendment is.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, rather than yield for a question, let me 
yield the floor so the Senator from Vermont can explain his amendment, 
and then reclaim the floor if there is not a Member of the minority 
present.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 1330

  Mr. SANDERS. Madam President, I thank my friend.
  Let me begin by saying this amendment enjoys widespread support from 
a very diverse coalition of organizations throughout this country that 
share the common concern that the price of gas and oil is soaring and 
they do not understand why. What they do know is that it is hurting 
consumers, especially in rural areas in North Dakota and Vermont and 
throughout this country, and it is hurting business groups throughout 
this country. These groups, among others, include the Petroleum 
Marketers Association of America, Public Citizen, the Gasoline and 
Automotive Service Dealers of America, the United Egg Producers, the 
Western Peanut Growers, Friends of the Earth, and the New England Fuel 
Institute. All of these organizations, for different reasons, are 
worried about the impact of rapidly rising oil prices on consumers.
  All of us took economics 101, and what they told us in economics 101 
is when supply is low and demand is high, prices go up. When supply is 
broad and demand is minimal, prices go down. Well, right now, 
unfortunately, it seems we can throw economics 101 right out the 
window, because at this moment the supply of oil in the United States 
is as high today as it was 20 years ago and demand for oil in this 
country is lower than it was a decade ago. So the question we are 
wrestling with now is: If supply is high and demand is low, why are oil 
prices soaring?

[[Page 15815]]

  Up until today, as a matter of fact, gasoline prices increased for 54 
straight days--the longest streak on record dating back to 1996. Today 
the national average for a gallon of gasoline is $2.69 a gallon--up 
more than $1 since late last year.
  There is mounting evidence that the runup in oil and gas prices has 
little to do with the fundamentals of supply and demand and has 
everything to do with excessive speculation by some of the same Wall 
Street firms that received the largest taxpayer bailout in the history 
of the world. They are back again, not having caused enough damage by 
driving our country and much of the world into a deep recession. Now 
they are back into their speculation and driving up oil prices which 
are having an enormously negative impact on consumers all over our 
country.
  Clearly, as a Congress, as a Senate, we have a responsibility to do 
everything we can to prevent the manipulation of oil and gas prices so 
that they reflect the basic economics supply and demand curve, not 
excessive speculation. This would not only help Americans struggling to 
fill up their gas tanks this summer, but it would have a positive 
impact, by the way, in expanding the number of international travelers 
visiting the United States, the fundamental purpose of the Travel 
Promotion Act that our amendment is a part of--would like to be a part 
of.
  The amendment I am offering or wish to offer would simply require the 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission to use its emergency authority to 
prevent the manipulation of oil prices. What is so horrible about that? 
What has caused our Republican friends to jump up in fear and say this 
amendment can't be offered?
  Let me mention to my Republican friends that last July the House of 
Representatives passed an identical bill by a vote of 402 to 19--the 
same bill. An overwhelming majority of Republicans in the House voted 
for that bill, but for some reason our Republican colleagues here do 
not want to give us the opportunity to vote for it today.
  I thank Majority Leader Reid and Senator Dorgan for trying to work 
out a compromise with the Republicans that would have enabled a vote on 
this amendment. Under this agreement, as Senator Dorgan has said, the 
Republicans would have been able to receive a vote on their top five 
nongermane amendments. They had five and we had one major nongermane 
amendment. It is very hard for me to understand--and maybe my friend 
from North Dakota has some thoughts on this one--I have a very hard 
time understanding what their fear is. What are they afraid of, if this 
amendment passes? Are they afraid we would be able to take action 
against the excessive speculation that is currently taking place on 
Wall Street?
  That is the only answer I can think of, and it is a pretty poor and 
unfortunate answer. The American people are hurting. We are in a 
recession. People have lost their jobs. People have seen a decline in 
their income. The American people are sick and tired of paying 
artificially high prices at the gas pump, and people in New England are 
worried about what happens next winter when they have to heat their 
homes with oil.
  I wish to mention in conclusion, interestingly enough, just 
yesterday--just yesterday--the Guardian, a British newspaper, reported:

       Staff at Goldman Sachs can look forward to the biggest 
     bonus payouts in the firm's 140-year history after a 
     spectacular first half of the year.

  I don't mean to pick on Goldman Sachs. There are a number of other 
financial outfits that may be engaged in excessive oil speculation as 
well, but Goldman Sachs is the leading trader of oil and gas 
derivatives. So here we are, Goldman Sachs, among others, now paying 
out huge bonuses after having been bailed out by the taxpayers of this 
country and they are back at their same old tricks of engaging in 
excessive speculation, which is what my amendment begins to address.
  I am amazed our Republican friends would refuse to allow an amendment 
to come to the floor of the Senate that was passed overwhelmingly in 
the House with very strong Republican support in that body.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, as I have indicated previously, the 
underlying bill on which we are going to have a cloture vote is 
bipartisan. There were over 50 cosponsors here in the Senate in the 
last Congress. Republicans and Democrats alike have supported it. We 
are apparently going to have a cloture vote that some--judging by what 
one of my colleagues said earlier--will feel they have to vote against. 
They will vote to stop this bill because they feel their right to amend 
was obstructed, despite the fact that their right to amend was 
explicitly agreed to. Working on bad information is not a great way to 
vote, in my judgment.
  Let me make an important point. I indicated earlier this is one of 
the few pieces of legislation that will be brought to the floor of the 
Senate that actually reduces the Federal budget deficit by $425 
million. That is pretty unbelievable, but there are two other big 
issues. One is at a time when we are seeing hundreds of thousands of 
Americans a month losing their jobs, losing their homes, losing hope 
because we are in a deep recession, at a time when we have all of this 
unemployment, we should be voting to move forward with a piece of 
legislation that tries to boost employment by increasing travel to our 
country by overseas visitors. These visitors are going to spend a 
substantial amount of money--$4,500 per tourist. And we know we now 
have 633,000 fewer international tourists coming to America than we did 
8 years ago. Why is that the case? The decline in tourism began after 
the terrible, tragic attack on this country on September 11, 2001. 
Following that, we obviously decided we wanted to try to keep 
terrorists out of this country. But we also made it harder for regular 
tourists. It was harder to get a visa. There were longer lines. Then 
the Iraq war began and a lot of people were upset with our country for 
unilateral actions in Iraq, and so on. We have gone through nearly a 
decade now in which people are traveling around the world more and more 
often, but they are going to Spain, France, Great Britain, Turkey, 
India, and Japan--all of which are advertising aggressively 
internationally to say, come to our country, be a part of our 
experience. See the beauty of India or Japan or Australia. But our 
country is not involved in that competition, and we should be, because 
there is no better place on this Earth. I know I am not objective about 
that, but to come here is to love this country and to understand the 
great character and culture that exists here.
  This piece of legislation will create jobs and opportunity in this 
country, but even more important, it will create goodwill all across 
this world from people who visit here and go home and have a better 
understanding of what America is about. At a time when we are in a deep 
recession, do we want to create jobs? I hope so. At a time when we care 
about what the world thinks about us, do we want to improve our 
standing in the world? I hope so.
  We will have a cloture vote in 3 or 4 minutes. I am told now, some 
who have cosponsored the bill, even, will probably come down and vote 
against cloture because they will claim they don't have the right to 
offer amendments. Well, they surely do. We agreed they could offer 
their first five amendments last Thursday. It is just that they said we 
can't offer our amendments because they object, for example, to the 
Sanders amendment.
  We said: You can offer five; we will offer three.
  They said: That is fine, except we won't allow you to offer the 
Sanders amendment. We won't agree to that.
  Again, my question: If the Senate has come to the point where it 
can't agree on tourism, what hope is there for big, controversial, and 
important issues that we will confront later this year?
  My hope is that perhaps some will understand the goodwill with which 
the majority leader and I and others offered the minority the right to 
offer the amendments they chose to offer. It was the minority that 
decided they didn't want to agree. It would be difficult for me to see 
some of those who

[[Page 15816]]

were given the ability to offer the amendments come to the floor and 
vote against a bill they support because they say they weren't given an 
opportunity to offer amendments. It is pretty hard to square that 
circle, and my hope is they will understand that before they vote. It 
will be very nice if perhaps on this one vote, it wouldn't be 
considered a leadership or a partisan vote and it wouldn't be based on 
misinformation, but instead we decided that this is about tourism, it 
is about promoting jobs and economic opportunity in our country, and it 
is about boosting the reputation of this country around the world by 
having people visit the United States and understanding the full 
breadth of what the American experience is about.
  I yield the floor, and I make a point of order that a quorum is not 
present.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DORGAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                             Cloture Motion

  Under the previous order and pursuant to rule XXII, the clerk will 
report the motion to invoke cloture.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

                             Cloture Motion

       We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the 
     provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate, 
     hereby move to bring to a close the debate on the Dorgan 
     amendment, No. 1347, to S. 1023, the Travel Promotion Act of 
     2009.
         Harry Reid, Byron L. Dorgan, Barbara Boxer, Ron Wyden, 
           Mark Begich, Evan Bayh, Charles Schumer, Max Baucus, 
           Jon Tester, Patty Murray, Jack Reed, Amy Klobuchar, 
           Patrick Leahy, Barbara Mikulski, Robert Menendez, Jeff 
           Bingaman, Joseph Lieberman.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, the mandatory quorum 
call be waived.
  The question is: Is it the sense of the Senate that debate on 
amendment No. 1347 offered by the Senator from North Dakota, Mr. 
Dorgan, to S. 1023, the Travel Promotion Act of 2009, shall be brought 
to a close?
  The yeas and nays are mandatory under the rule, and the clerk will 
call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from Alaska (Mr. Begich), the 
Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Byrd), the Senator from Massachusetts 
(Mr. Kennedy), the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. Specter), the Senator 
from Montana (Mr. Tester), the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Udall), and 
the Senator from Oregon (Mr. Wyden) are necessarily absent.
  Mr. KYL. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the Senator 
from Texas (Mrs. Hutchison), the Senator from Alaska (Ms. Murkowski), 
the Senator from Kansas (Mr. Roberts), the Senator from Louisiana (Mr. 
Vitter), and the Senator from Ohio (Mr. Voinovich).
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber 
desiring to vote?
  The result was announced--yeas 53, nays 34, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 211 Leg.]

                                YEAS--53

     Akaka
     Baucus
     Bayh
     Bennet
     Bingaman
     Boxer
     Brown
     Burris
     Cantwell
     Cardin
     Carper
     Casey
     Conrad
     Dodd
     Dorgan
     Durbin
     Ensign
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Gillibrand
     Hagan
     Harkin
     Inouye
     Johnson
     Kaufman
     Kerry
     Klobuchar
     Kohl
     Landrieu
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lieberman
     Lincoln
     Martinez
     McCaskill
     Menendez
     Merkley
     Mikulski
     Murray
     Nelson (NE)
     Nelson (FL)
     Pryor
     Reed
     Rockefeller
     Sanders
     Schumer
     Shaheen
     Stabenow
     Udall (NM)
     Warner
     Webb
     Whitehouse

                                NAYS--34

     Alexander
     Barrasso
     Bennett
     Bond
     Brownback
     Bunning
     Burr
     Chambliss
     Coburn
     Cochran
     Collins
     Corker
     Cornyn
     Crapo
     DeMint
     Enzi
     Graham
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Hatch
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Johanns
     Kyl
     Lugar
     McCain
     McConnell
     Reid
     Risch
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Snowe
     Thune
     Wicker

                             NOT VOTING--12

     Begich
     Byrd
     Hutchison
     Kennedy
     Murkowski
     Roberts
     Specter
     Tester
     Udall (CO)
     Vitter
     Voinovich
     Wyden
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote the yeas are 53, the nays are 34. 
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted in 
the affirmative, the motion is rejected.
  The majority leader is recognized.
  Mr. REID. I enter a motion to reconsider the vote by which cloture 
was not invoked on the Dorgan amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The motion is entered.
  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent the cloture motion on the bill be 
withdrawn.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. REID. Madam 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. REID. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the 
quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

                          ____________________