[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 10]
[Senate]
[Pages 13789-13828]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




MAKING EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING 
                 SEPTEMBER 30, 2014--MOTION TO PROCEED

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I move to proceed to Calendar No. 488, S. 
2648.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will report the motion.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       Motion to proceed to Calendar No. 488, S. 2648, a bill 
     making emergency supplemental appropriations for the fiscal 
     year ending September 30, 2014, and for other purposes.


                                Schedule

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, following my remarks and those of the 
Republican leader, the Senate will resume consideration of the motion 
to proceed to S. 2648, the emergency supplemental appropriations bill, 
postcloture. The time until 10 a.m. will be equally divided between the 
two leaders or their designees. The ranking member of the Budget 
Committee, Senator Sessions, will control the time from 10 a.m. to 11 
a.m. and the majority will control the time from 11 a.m. to 12 noon.
  We will notify all Senators when votes are scheduled.


                Measure Placed on the Calendar--S. 2709

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I understand that S. 2709 is at the desk and 
due for a second reading.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will read the bill by 
title for the second time.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A bill (S. 2709) to extend and reauthorize the Export-
     Import Bank of the United States, and for other purposes.

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I would object to any further proceedings 
with respect to this bill.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Objection is heard. The bill will 
be placed on the calendar.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I respect, admire, and applaud Senators 
Cantwell and Manchin for the work they have done on this most important 
bill. We need to find a way forward on it.
  There are some in the House of Representatives and a few over here 
who have made this very difficult to do, and it is so important to the 
economic stability of our country.
  I met yesterday with the head of Boeing aircraft, and they have 
800,000 jobs directly and indirectly connected to this--I shouldn't say 
``to this.'' But it is a significant part of what they do and need to 
do to get their finances in order. It would be a shame if we weren't 
able to renew this. It expires at the end of September.


                        September Work Schedule

  Before we finish our business and Senators return for the work period 
at home, I want everyone to know about what is going to happen when we 
come back.
  Following the August recess, when we convene on September 8, we will 
be here for 1 week, 2 weeks, and 2 days. That is it. September 23 is 
our target date to adjourn until after the election. I hope we can do 
that. This leaves us little more than 2 weeks and 2 days. That is not a 
lot of time for the workload we have to do.
  We need to pass appropriations measures to keep the government from 
shutting down. We need to pass a temporary extension to the Internet 
Tax Freedom Act. We need to do something about the items I just 
mentioned about the Ex-Im Bank. We have to do the Defense authorization 
bill, which is extremely important for the fighting men and women of 
this country. We are going to address the Udall constitutional 
amendment on capping finance reform. And we are going to reconsider a 
number of issues: college affordability, minimum wage, Hobby Lobby, 
student debt.
  We have a lot of work to do. So everyone needs to know that when we 
come back on September 8, there will be no weekends off. There are only 
2 weeks until we go home, and everyone should not plan things on these 
weekends. So no one can say: You need to give us notice.
  You have been given notice.
  I had a chairmen's lunch yesterday. Every chairman there said we 
should work those two weekends. So everybody, this isn't me trying to 
dictate a schedule. At lunch yesterday, the chairmen of this 
institution said we should work those two weekends.
  I just mentioned a few things we have to do. So again, Saturday, 
September 13; Sunday, September 14; Saturday, September 20; Sunday, 
September 21, we need to be here, including the Fridays that precede 
those dates that I gave. Every day between September 8 and September 30 
is fair game. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, we need to be here.
  I repeat for the third time here this morning: There is so much to do 
and so little time to do it. We have not had a productive Congress. We 
can't push everything back to the so-called lameduck. Much of what we 
are able to accomplish in September depends on the Republicans in the 
House. Will they get their business done and pass legislation that is 
important for our country and including the economy?

[[Page 13790]]

  Here we have lamented the fact that they refuse to take up and pass 
our comprehensive immigration reform. What a good piece of legislation, 
a bipartisan bill passed out of this body by an overwhelming margin, 
and Republicans refuse to take it up. Among other things, it will 
reduce the debt by $1 trillion.
  We have no extension of long-term unemployment benefits. I have 
talked about minimum wage and I have talked about student debt. I have 
talked about Hobby Lobby. I have talked about equal pay for women, 
getting paid equally for the work they do that is the same as men. But 
they have no interest in these issues. They certainly have no interest 
in getting corporate bosses out of health care for women.
  No, they are busy turning the House floor into a theater. And it is a 
double feature like we used to go to when they had double features--at 
least I don't think they do anymore. It is a double feature.
  House Republicans are, first of all, going to sue the President. And, 
above all, the Republicans in the House and the Senate--the most anti-
trial-lawyer group of legislators in the history of the country--who 
are they going to? Trial lawyers. Who is going to pay those trial 
lawyers? The American taxpayers. And if that isn't enough, once their 
lawsuit gets going, they are going to try to impeach the President.
  So that is what it is all about. We have a lot to do. A lot depends 
on the political theater in the House. If the House Republicans are 
serious and focus their time on legislation to help American families, 
then it could be a very productive month in September. If they keep up 
the sue-and-impeach show, we will stay right here working until they 
finally get serious about giving the American people a fair shot.


                     Reservation of Leadership Time

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
leadership time is reserved.
  Under the previous order, the time until 10 a.m. will be equally 
divided and controlled between the two leaders or their designees.


                   Recognition of the Minority Leader

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


                             Border Crisis

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, the ongoing humanitarian crisis at our 
Nation's southern border demands a solution. It really just boggles the 
mind that the President of the United States would rather fund raise in 
Hollywood than work with members of his own party to forge a 
legislative response to this tragic situation and to do something to 
prevent more young people from making the perilous and potentially 
life-threatening journey across the desert.
  The President initially laid out reforms that, while modest, 
represented a step in the right direction. But evidently the politicos 
who increasingly have the President's ear these days couldn't go along 
with that, so the President stopped defending his own policy reforms. 
Instead, he demanded a blank check that would literally preserve the 
status quo, a blank check he knew wouldn't fix the problem, a blank 
check he knew couldn't pass Congress, and a blank check he knew members 
of his own party in Congress didn't even support.
  Faced with a national crisis, he listened once again to his most 
partisan instincts instead of uniting Congress around a common solution 
so he could lay blame for that crisis on somebody else. Apparently no 
crisis is too big to be trumped by politics in the Obama White House. 
It is exasperating for those of us who want to work toward bipartisan 
solutions; it is confusing, I am sure, to the Democrats who share our 
desire to get something accomplished; and it is emboldening to 
Democrats who don't, including the Senate Democratic leadership.
  When faced with a crisis, a President's job is to show Presidential 
leadership and to get his party on board with the reforms necessary to 
address it. Scuttling reform and prolonging the crisis is not part of 
the job description.
  So what I am suggesting, Mr. President, is that you spend a little 
more time actually doing the job you were elected to do. Press 
``pause'' on the nonstop photo-ops and start demonstrating some real 
leadership instead. The barbecue joints and the pool halls will still 
be there after we solve this problem.
  Mr. President, it is a dangerous journey to the border. Children are 
suffering at the hands of some seriously bad actors down there. News 
reports suggest you even knew about this long before it started making 
national news. You could have intervened before this turned into a 
full-blown humanitarian crisis, but you didn't. You could have worked 
with us to get a bipartisan solution. You didn't.
  Mr. President, you have a special responsibility to help us end this 
crisis in a humane and appropriate way. Congress cannot do it without 
your leadership or your engagement. It is literally impossible to do 
this without you. So pick up the phone you keep telling us about and 
call us. Call your fellow Democrats and lobby them to get on board. 
Work with us, and let's address this crisis.


                             Foreign Policy

  Recently I expressed deep concern that the President pursued a 
foreign policy based on withdrawing from America's forward presence and 
alliance commitments, hollowing out our Nation's conventional military 
forces, placing an overreliance upon personal diplomacy and 
international organizations, and literally abandoning the war on 
terror. I believe this will leave his successor to deal with a more 
dangerous world and with fewer tools to meet the threats.
  Later this morning several Members of Congress charged with leading 
national security committees and policymaking will meet with the 
President to discuss national security. I don't expect the President to 
brief us on his plan for rebuilding the military, especially in a way 
that would allow us to meet our commitments in Europe and the Middle 
East or that would allow for an effective strategic pivot to Asia, nor 
do I expect the President to lay out for us his plans to provide the 
intelligence community with all the tools it will need to deal with the 
threat of international terrorism from Al Qaeda and its affiliated 
groups over the next decade. Those are strategic threats best addressed 
by integrating all the tools of our Nation's power, and, candidly, it 
would require the President to revisit the policy stances he took as a 
candidate back in 2008.
  I do hope that at a minimum the President will discuss two near-term 
issues:
  First, I hope he will explain his plan or efforts to assist the 
Israelis in demilitarizing Gaza and ensuring that Hamas is not left 
with the ability to launch indirect fire attacks against the civilian 
populace or to infiltrate Israel through tunnels. In coordination with 
Israel, we can assist the Palestinian Authority with any programs to 
assume responsibility for monitoring those access points into Gaza.
  Absent any active efforts by the administration, I would at least 
like assurances that the President is not working to impose a cease-
fire upon Israel that is harmful to the objectives of the current 
military campaign.
  Second, earlier this month a group of Republican Senators wrote to 
the President imploring him to craft a plan for containing the threat 
posed to Iraq and Jordan by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. 
Specifically, we asked the President to deploy an assessment team to 
Jordan to develop a plan to prevent the spread of ISIL in a way that 
threatened our ally Jordan.
  Although Ambassador Susan Rice responded to our letter, her letter 
did not address how the administration intends to combat ISIL. Instead, 
Ambassador Rice renewed the administration's request for a new 
counterterrorism partnership fund. To this point, the administration 
has failed to provide the Congress with any plan for how this new 
counterterrorism fund would assist our ally, further our own interests, 
or train and equip a moderate opposition within Syria. That would be a 
good starting point for today's discussion with the President.

[[Page 13791]]




                        Opiate Addiction Impacts

  Prescription drug and heroin abuse have risen to epidemic levels in 
my home State of Kentucky. More Kentuckians now lose their lives to 
drug overdose--largely driven by painkillers--than to car crashes. It 
is a huge problem.
  Earlier this year I convened a listening session in the Commonwealth 
to hear from those closest to the problem, from professionals across 
the medical, public health, and law enforcement spheres, as well as a 
brave young man who managed to break his heroin addiction after 
watching his own friends overdose. We discussed the extent of the 
problem, and one issue in particular that grabbed my attention was the 
increasing number of infants being born in Kentucky dependent on 
opiates. Researchers estimate that more than one baby every hour--one 
baby every hour--is now born dependent on drugs and suffering from 
withdrawal--a number that has increased in my home State by more than 
3,000 percent since the year 2000. We have gone from 29 infants 
identified as suffering from drug withdrawal annually to more than 950. 
Experts believe there are even more cases that go unreported. This is 
heartbreaking. I say this especially as a father of three daughters. 
These children are the most innocent members of our society. We have to 
protect them.
  Thankfully, the Commonwealth is taking this problem seriously. Both 
the Kentucky Perinatal Association and the Kentucky Perinatal Quality 
Initiative Collaborative have made as their primary focus reducing the 
number of infants born dependent on opiates and other drugs. I 
certainly commend their efforts, but there is more we can do at the 
Federal level.
  Maternal addiction and infant opiate dependency are epidemics that 
can best be overcome by effective coordination between stakeholders at 
the State and Federal levels.
  One bill that was recently introduced in the House, the CRIB Act, 
would help address the need for greater coordination between doctors, 
nurses, hospitals, and governments at the State and Federal level. I 
commend the sponsors of that legislation for their leadership.
  Today in the Senate I will introduce the Protecting Our Infants Act, 
which seeks to address not only infants suffering from opiate 
withdrawal but maternal opiate addiction as well. It would help 
identify and disseminate recommendations for preventing and treating 
maternal addiction so that we can reduce the number of infants born 
dependent on opiates and other drugs.
  My bill would also promote recommendations as to how to pinpoint 
those babies suffering from withdrawal and how best to treat them. 
Because I have heard from so many experts in Kentucky on the need for 
more research into infant withdrawal and its long-term effects, my bill 
would shine a light on those areas as well.
  The Protecting Our Infants Act would also encourage the Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention to work with States to improve the 
availability and quality of data so that they can respond more 
effectively to this public health crisis.
  My legislation is certainly no silver bullet, but it is a step in the 
right direction, and it would help ensure that our public health system 
is better equipped to treat opiate addiction in mothers and in their 
newborn children. Together we can overcome this tragic problem. I am 
going to remain focused on it until we do.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Nebraska.


                          Family Medical Leave

  Mrs. FISCHER. I thank the Chair.
  Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the need to strengthen 
American families and enhance workplace flexibility, and I am very 
pleased to be joined here on the floor of the Senate this morning by my 
good friend the junior Senator from Maine.
  In Nebraska and all throughout the country, too many families 
continue to struggle in this weak economy. Even with moms and dads 
working two or three jobs, some families find it hard to get ahead. 
Household income has plummeted by more than $3,300, and 3.7 million 
more women are in poverty. The average price for a gallon of gas has 
nearly doubled, and the labor force participation rate has declined by 
2.9 percentage points since 2009.
  Many economists agree that the surest way to generate sustained 
economic growth and empower struggling families is to pass 
comprehensive tax reform. Addressing overregulation should also be a 
top priority. Moreover, it is a simple truth that less government 
spending means families will keep more of their own money. Agreement on 
how exactly to achieve these needed fiscal reforms remains elusive and, 
unfortunately, unlikely in a Capitol paralyzed with election fever. 
Nonetheless, there are reasonable policy changes we can all agree on, 
and those changes will make life easier for families.
  I have been working on a number of commonsense measures--my Strong 
Families, Strong Communities plan--to empower working families, 
increase take-home pay, and ensure flexibility in the workplace. Today 
I would like to discuss part of that plan.
  The Strong Families Act is a bipartisan proposal I introduced with 
Senator King to address the challenge of paid leave. It is no secret 
that balancing responsibilities at home with duties at work is a common 
struggle for working parents. For an increasing number of Americans 
these pressures include raising young children while also caring for 
aging parents.
  While I believe we must do more to help these working families, the 
usual Washington answers of one-size-fits-all Federal mandates and 
higher taxes are not a part of the solution we are proposing. Instead, 
I believe we should focus on a more balanced approach that respects 
both family obligations and the employer's costs of doing business. 
There are ways to increase the options for working adults without 
hurting existing employment arrangements or threatening job security.
  The Family and Medical Leave Act--FMLA--of 1993 requires employers of 
50 or more employees to provide up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave, which 
can be used for events such as the birth or adoption of children, 
serious medical issues, or providing care to close family members.
  The problem for many families is that current law does not require 
paid time off. Unpaid leave is practically impossible for countless 
Americans, especially hourly workers who live paycheck to paycheck. 
Many employers voluntarily offer generous compensation packages that 
include paid parental or medical leave. A survey of more than 1,100 
employers found that 68 percent of large employers provide paid 
parental leave. At the same time not all workers enjoy these options 
despite increasingly complex family demands. Again, this is especially 
true for low-wage workers. With more than half of women working as the 
primary breadwinners, workplace flexibility has become a necessity for 
our 21st-century families.
  It is not just children who require personal care and attention; it 
is also our aging parents. Nearly half of middle-aged adults have 
elderly parents, and they are still supporting their own children. Over 
43 million Americans provide direct care to older family members, with 
women serving as 66 percent of all primary caregivers. As the baby 
boomer generation ages, the number of senior citizens requiring care 
will likely spike. Less take-home pay for these caregivers means 
tighter finances, more stress, and lost opportunities--all at a time 
when families are confronting health crises or dealing with unique 
challenges of starting a new family. With such events often coinciding 
with high medical bills, the last thing a stressed family needs is a 
smaller working budget.
  Senator King and I have offered a proposal that would enable working 
families to have continued access to pay while they are meeting 
necessary family obligations. Our plan would create a tax credit to 
encourage employers to voluntarily offer paid leave for workers. To be 
eligible for that tax credit, the employer must at a minimum offer 4 
weeks of paid leave, but they could offer more. Paid leave would be 
available on an hourly basis and would be separate from the other 
vacation or sick leave. For each hour of

[[Page 13792]]

paid leave provided, the employer would receive a 25-percent 
nonrefundable tax credit. The more pay the employer offers, the greater 
the tax credit. This tax credit will be available to any employer with 
qualified employees regardless of size. Importantly, our bill is 
reasonable. It is a balanced solution that can make a real difference 
in the lives of working families.
  When we do this without new mandates or new taxes, it creates an 
incentive structure to encourage employers to offer that paid leave, 
specifically targeting those who hire lower income hourly paid workers. 
This should not be just another election-year issue. This is a middle-
class issue and our bill takes the partisan politics out of it and 
offers a meaningful solution we can pass.
  I wish to thank my friend from Maine, Senator King, who joined me in 
offering this bill.
  Once again, this now famous surf-and-turf caucus is working together 
on a commonsense proposal, and it is a proposal that can help American 
families. I am grateful for the Senator's input, his hard work and 
friendship, and I look forward to closely working with him in the 
future so we can advance this measure in the Senate.
  I thank the Presiding Officer and yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Maine.
  Mr. KING. Mr. President, I am delighted to join my colleague from 
Nebraska to introduce what I think is an important and commonsense and 
workable bill that could be passed in the next several weeks, and I 
think there will be broad agreement across the political spectrum.
  The question we are answering is: What does Suriname, Papua-New 
Guinea, and the United States have in common? The answer is: They are 
the only three countries in the world that we have been able to turn up 
that don't have any provision for paid maternity leave. Every member of 
the industrialized world, except the United States, has some kind of 
coverage for paid maternity leave.
  This chart gives the various levels. You will see in red is the 
United States, Suriname, Papua New Guinea, and that is it in the whole 
world. This is something we can do that will not affect our 
competitiveness, will not be a problem in our economic growth, and in 
fact I believe it will contribute to it.
  Today a family who has a health crisis with an elderly parent, a 
child or has the joyful issue of a new child in their family has a 
terrible dilemma. The dilemma is: Do I stay home to take care of the 
child or the elderly parent in a health crisis or do I have to put food 
on the table by going to work because for every hour of work I miss I 
lose an hour of pay. That is a dilemma we should not put our people 
through.
  As I have said, I believe this is a productivity issue. All of the 
discussions we have had in recent months about pay and gender inequity 
often come down to the issue of workplace flexibility, particularly in 
the case of women who are often the ones who are put in the dilemma I 
mentioned of having to choose between their earnings and family 
obligations. Women are the ones who are often trapped in this dilemma, 
and they are the ones who are asking for and seeking--quite 
reasonably--the same kind of flexibility that virtually every other 
working person in the world already enjoys.
  I like this bill and agreed with my colleague from Nebraska to join 
in it because it is voluntary. It is not a mandate from Washington, it 
is not something that says every employer in the country has to do 
this, and there will be rules and bureaucracy and adjudications and all 
those kinds of things. No, this is a voluntary, incentive-based program 
that says every employer--not just those 50 and above or 100 and above 
or 500 and above--in the country will have this tax credit available to 
them that will allow them to offer paid leave to their employees.
  I think this is the way we should approach this and not, as my 
colleague has said, with a one-size-fits-all mandate emanating from 
Washington. I think incentives are always better than mandates.
  The other element that is important about this bill is it focuses on 
the people who are currently least likely to have some kind of paid 
leave available to them, and usually those are people who work on an 
hourly basis. That is whom this bill is focused on. The interesting 
aspect of the data is that as it goes up the income scale into salaried 
employees, more than two-thirds of American workers in this category 
already have a paid leave policy. It is when you get down into the 
working people--the hourly workers--that we have discovered the real 
problem lies. That is why I think this bill has an important focus on 
hourly workers, people who are covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act 
and people who otherwise are not going to have this kind of protection.
  This is about flexibility. As I have talked to and listened to 
women's groups and advocacy groups, flexibility is always first on the 
agenda, and that is exactly what we are talking about, so people--men 
or women--don't have to make that agonizing decision, people who are 
living paycheck to paycheck don't have to make the agonizing decision 
between being able to put food on the table and pay the rent or staying 
home to take care of an ill child or an elderly parent or to stay home 
a reasonable period after the joyous occasion of the arrival of a new 
child.
  It is also about productivity. I believe we will see an increase in 
productivity because people will not be preoccupied when they are at 
work. They know they are going to be there and they know they are going 
to have this protection and it takes away that agonizing worry and 
anxiety. It also--by giving people paid leave--will enable them to 
continue to contribute to the economy, and I believe it will actually 
be a positive stimulus to our economy.
  Of course everybody says we are in competition with the rest of the 
world. Not on this. Every place else in the world provides this level 
of benefits so we are in a catchup situation, and I believe, as I said, 
I think we will see an increase in productivity and in economic 
activity.
  Finally, it is about fairness. Frankly, to some extent it is about 
gender fairness. It is about fairness to working women who are expected 
in our culture to be the ones to take care of a sick child. That may 
not be fair, that may not be the wave of the future, but that is a fact 
today. It is about fairness to those working women who have to make a 
choice between putting food on the table or taking care of a sick child 
or taking the necessary time off after the birth of a child in order to 
have that event be a happy one and not an economic strain on the 
family.
  I am delighted to join my colleague from Nebraska--the leader of the 
surf-and-turf caucus--on her brilliant bill that I believe is something 
we can come together on, on a bipartisan basis, and actually do 
something about and not just talk about the problem of income equality 
and not just talk about the problem of fairness and not just talk about 
the problem of flexibility in the workplace but actually do something 
about it in a practical and commonsense way that I think will have 
tremendous ramifications across the country.
  I am delighted to be able to join her. I compliment the Senator from 
Nebraska for her work in bringing this forward, and I look forward to 
what I hope will be an expeditious consideration of her bill in the 
Senate and in the Congress. This is a change we can make that will make 
a real difference in people's lives across America.
  I thank the Presiding Officer and suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Immigration Reform

  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, the people of the United States have 
truly begged and pleaded with their lawmakers for years to create a 
lawful system of immigration--one that works, one that is fair, one 
that serves the national interest, one that we can believe

[[Page 13793]]

in. They have been justly and rightly convinced of that fact, and they 
have demanded it of their elected officeholders to secure their 
communities and protect the integrity of our national borders. Some say 
there is something wrong with that. I say there is absolutely nothing 
wrong with that. That is the right thing. That is the moral thing. That 
is the responsible thing. That is the decent thing. That is what any 
great nation should have--an immigration policy that serves its 
national interest and is fairly and lawfully conducted.
  But these pleas have fallen on deaf ears. Our border is absolutely 
not secure. It is in a state of crisis. Our communities are not safe. 
Preventable crimes occur every day because our laws are not being 
enforced and our sovereignty, at its base level, is not being 
protected. And, we have a President planning to issue sweeping 
executive amnesty in violation of law, in ways in which he has no 
power, and threatens the constitutional separation of powers. Congress 
passes laws; the President must execute the laws. The President is not 
entitled to make laws, to conduct actions contrary to plain laws. The 
President simply cannot say Congress didn't act, so I have to act.
  Well, Congress decided not to act in a way he wanted. They considered 
legislation, rejected it, and now he is going to--it appears from 
article after article--go forward and carry out an action anyway. It 
would be fundamentally wrong. This cannot stand. It will not stand.
  My position has been and remains that Congress should not pass border 
legislation that does not foreclose the possibility of these unlawful 
Executive orders. As an institution, this Congress has a duty to 
protect this institution and our constituents.
  Currently, the President has issued approximately half a million 
grants of administrative amnesty and work permits to individuals 
unlawfully present in the country up to 30 years of age. Now the 
President wants to issue another 5 to 6 million work permits to illegal 
immigrants of any age, despite a clear prohibition in the Immigration 
and Nationality Act. He is not entitled to do that. Plain law says you 
cannot employ someone in the country unlawfully.
  People think: Well, it is one thing to say you will not deport 
somebody. But, colleagues, what was done previously was to provide, 
under the DACA legislation, an ID card with the words ``Work Permit'' 
across the top, ``Work Authorization'' across the top.
  So the President is providing, in violation of plain law, the ability 
of people in the country to work who are not entitled to work, who will 
be able to take jobs from any American today. We have a lot of 
Americans today struggling for work. At a time when millions of 
Americans are out of work, the President's plan is a direct affront to 
them--to every single unemployed American, to people around the world 
who have applied to come to the United States and have not been 
admitted, so they did not come unlawfully. What do we say to them when 
this happens?
  It is particularly damaging to those in the poorest and most 
vulnerable communities in America. So who is speaking for them? Who 
will give them a voice in Congress? Will Members hear? Will we hear 
their pleas? I have been shocked that we have not seen a willingness in 
the Congress to resist more effectively than what we are seeing today.
  So let's consider a bit more deeply for a moment what the President's 
Executive action would do to immigration enforcement in America. Let me 
say clearly, colleagues, we are not making this up. We are not having 
some idea that he might do something for 5 or 6 million more people. It 
has been repeatedly leaked from the White House--not leaked; they have 
discussed it. The President has promised it to activist groups like La 
Raza and the ACLU that he has been meeting with. He has told them he 
intends to do this. It is only a question of how and the time. The 
latest article yesterday in the Wall Street Journal--a big article--
said it would happen shortly after Labor Day. Well, this is not 
something we are making up. It is a direct threat, a direct promise, a 
statement, it appears, from the White House.
  I hope they will not go forward with it. Surely cooler heads in the 
White House will push back. Surely his Attorney General will say: Mr. 
President, you cannot do this. His legal counsel in the White House 
will say: Mr. President, do not do this. This is not lawful. The 
Department of Homeland Security needs to be saying: This would be 
devastating, Mr. President. How can we enforce any laws? Please do not 
do this.
  I do not think it is absolutely certain to happen. But it seems to me 
that by every indication it is an absolute intention right now of the 
President to go forward with this or they would not have had at least a 
half a dozen articles on it--the National Journal, Time magazine, and 
others.
  I have spoken many times with a great American by the name of Chris 
Crane, a former marine. He is also an ICE officer and president of the 
officers' ICE Council--the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Council. 
He has explained how his officers are ordered not to do their job. They 
have even sued the Secretary of Homeland Security for blocking them 
from fulfilling their oath to enforce the laws of the United States of 
America. Can you imagine that? I was in Federal law enforcement for 15 
years. I have never heard of a situation in which a group of law 
officers sue their supervisor saying, in Federal court: Mr. Judge, my 
supervisor is ordering me not to do what my duty and my oath requires 
on a daily basis.
  That is a stunning development. Their morale for years has been one 
of the lowest in the Federal Government. Now I think it is the lowest 
because they have been demeaned and rejected in a duty they believe is 
worthwhile for them to carry out.
  One of the things Mr. Crane explained is that the President's 
previous Executive amnesty for the so-called DREAMers basically halted 
enforcement for anyone who asserted protections under that new 
administration policy. Mr. Crane would report that ICE officers would 
come into contact with individuals unlawfully present in the country--
individuals they would encounter in prisons and jails. They would be 
called by a local police department that they have arrested someone for 
a serious crime. They would tell the ICE officers. Routinely they are 
supposed to go and pick them up and deport them. They would encounter 
people in jail--that is one of the big jobs they have--and they would 
be forced to release them simply because they assert: I came here as a 
youth. Nobody is going to do any investigation on this. How do you 
investigate it? The effect is to demoralize and make it difficult, and 
almost impossible, to enforce the law.
  Now imagine, then, what would happen if the President expands this 
administrative amnesty and work authorization program to cover millions 
of unlawful immigrants of all ages. Everyone ICE comes in contact with 
will assert these protections: I am qualified under the President's 
amnesty. And any who fail the application will say they are eligible 
for this amnesty.
  So what then? Will the FBI open investigations, check when they 
entered the country or whom they entered the country with, and where 
they came from? They are not going to do that--of course not. The 
officers are going to be totally unable to resist false claims from 
applicants, who happen to be the people they have arrested. It is going 
to demoralize immigration enforcement officers. ICE officers will again 
be issued orders basically to stand down. No enforcement is going to 
occur. It will be the effective end of immigration enforcement in 
America, in my opinion.
  You cannot maintain an effective, lawful, consistent, fair 
immigration enforcement policy with these kinds of regulations 
occurring and these kinds of orders from the White House, who is the 
Chief Executive Officer of America, who is empowered and directed to 
ensure that the laws of the United States are carried out--not 
empowered to violate the laws of the United States.

[[Page 13794]]

  We have also heard from officers who have processed immigration 
applications. These are people who receive applications to come to the 
United States in a lawful way. These dedicated folks at the U.S. 
Citizenship and Immigration Services are people who have to process all 
of these millions of applicants if the President issues his order.
  So let me read at length from a statement from the President of the 
USCIS Council, who represents these CIS officers who have an awesome 
duty. He wrote last year--this is what he said:

       USCIS adjudications officers are pressured to rubber stamp 
     applications instead of conducting diligent case review and 
     investigation.

  This is the officers saying that their bosses are pressuring them to 
just rubber stamp applications right now--not to investigate, not to 
ask questions--just approve them. He goes on:

       The culture at USCIS encourages all applications to be 
     approved, discouraging proper investigation into red flags 
     and discouraging the denial of any applications. USCIS has 
     been turned into an ``approval machine.''

  That is what the top CIS officer said in a statement last fall. They 
have been turned into an approval machine. No wonder the American 
people are unhappy with what goes on here. Does anyone really know how 
serious this is? It is amazing that we would undermine the very 
integrity, really, of the entire process, and that is why they have 
protested. That is why they have come forward. It hurts them. They feel 
bad to see the great laws of the United States being routinely 
eviscerated.
  He went on to say this:

       USCIS has created an almost insurmountable bureaucracy 
     which often prevents USCIS adjudications officers from 
     contacting and coordinating with ICE agents--

  Who know something about these people, perhaps--

     and officers in cases that should have their involvement. 
     USCIS officers are pressured to approve visa applications for 
     many individuals ICE agents have determined should be placed 
     into deportation proceedings.

  That is a very serious charge, and that is happening. He is not 
making that up. It goes on:

       The USCIS officers who identify illegal aliens that, in 
     accordance with law should be placed into immigration removal 
     proceedings before a federal judge, are prevented from 
     exercising their authority and responsibility to issue 
     Notices To Appear.

  This is a notice to appear in court. They are being obstructed and 
told not to do it. He goes on to say:

       The attitude of USCIS management is not that the Agency 
     serves the American public or the laws of the United States, 
     or public safety and national security, but instead that the 
     agency serves illegal aliens and the attorneys which 
     represent them. While we believe in treating all people with 
     respect, we are concerned that this agency tasked with such a 
     vital security mission is too greatly influenced by special 
     interest groups--to the point that it no longer properly 
     performs its mission.

  What a devastating critique. Does anyone care? Has the President done 
one thing to respond to these allegations? Is the Senate bill that is 
offered by Senator Reid and our Democratic colleagues, with the 
blessings of the President--does it do one thing to fix one of these 
problems? No. They have no intention of fixing these problems. They do 
not want to fix these problems. This is their policy: to foment more 
lawlessness and to see that the laws are undermined in such a way they 
cannot be effectively enforced.
  It is just wrong, colleagues. Republicans and Democrats need to stand 
up to this. Don't we need to respond to the desires of the American 
people for a lawful system of immigration? Isn't that right and just 
and decent that they ask of us? Yet we go along in total ignorance and 
ignore these kinds of statements from our own enforcement officers, 
which anybody who looks at the border and sees what is happening could 
believe every bit of. And indeed it is true.
  It goes on to say:

       This agency is tasked with such a vital security mission is 
     too greatly influenced by special interest groups--to the 
     point that it no longer properly performs its mission.

  In virtually every article we see the President is meeting with some 
group, such as La Raza, which has very extreme policies on 
immigration--basically an open borders policy. They have opposed every 
policy of lawfulness. Another similar group, the ACLU, was commenting 
recently on what they thought the President had told them he was going 
to do about not enforcing the law.
  These are the kinds of groups he is meeting with. He is not meeting 
with the law officers. He never sat down with them to ask: Tell me what 
it is like on the border. Let's see if we fix this thing. Let's make 
this system work. He has never done that. That is very indicative. This 
legislation that would spend $2.7 billion, proposed by the Democratic 
leadership in the Senate, and totally blessed by the President. This is 
the President's bill and it does nothing to fix any of the problems. It 
just asks for more money.
  The President of the United States Citizenship and Immigration 
Services wrote last year:

       DHS and USCIS leadership have intentionally established an 
     application process for DACA--

  That is his first amnesty for DREAMers that the President issued.

     --that bypasses traditional in-person investigatory 
     interviews with trained USCIS adjudications officers. These 
     practices were put in place to stop proper screening and 
     enforcement,--

  He is saying that these practices were put in place to stop proper 
screening and enforcement.

     --and guarantee that applications will be rubber-stamped for 
     approval, a practice that virtually guarantees widespread 
     fraud and places public safety at risk.

  This is the head of the USCIS Officers Association. He is laying out 
event after event, action after action, that demonstrates we are 
dealing with an administration that does not want the law enforced. Can 
you believe these words?
  The president of USCIS goes on to say:

       U.S. taxpayers are currently tasked with absorbing the cost 
     of over $200 million worth of fee waivers bestowed on 
     applicants for naturalization during the last fiscal year. 
     This is in addition to the strain put on our Social Security 
     system that has been depleted by an onslaught of refugees 
     receiving SSI benefits as soon as their feet touch U.S. soil.

  So the story that there are no Social Security benefits is not 
correct. The refugees who enter our asylum system through the refugee 
program are entitled to these benefits when they hit the soil.
  He goes on to say:

       Large swaths of the Immigration and Nationality Act are not 
     effectively enforced for legal immigrants and visa holders, 
     including laws regarding public charges as well as many other 
     provisions as the USCIS lacks the resources to adequately 
     screen and scrutinize legal immigrants and non-immigrants 
     seeking status adjustment. There is also insufficient 
     screening and monitoring of student visas.

  These are breathtaking reports from our top officers, from the front 
lines of law enforcement, from people who screen and review 
applications every day for the United States of America.
  Now think--just imagine what will happen to our system if the 
President goes forward with his executive action. It would overwhelm a 
system that is already buckling under the weight of massive illegality 
on our southern border.
  We must end this lawlessness. We can end this. We can do so. Let me 
repeat. I know it can be done. But to do so, we must first stop doing 
more damage. We must prevent the President's massive executive amnesty 
from going forward. The public, once riled to these issues, will not be 
ignored this time, in my opinion. They will not let the representatives 
of either party acquiesce to lawlessness. That is why I have said that 
Congress as an institution must not support any border bill that come 
forward that does not expressly prohibit the President's executive 
amnesty ideas that he has been talking about, and would block him from 
spending any money to execute an unlawful plan of this kind.
  How can we not take this position, colleagues? What basis do we have 
to say we will not take any action when we were being told on a daily 
basis what the President plans to do? Are we ready to go to recess for 
August having done nothing, said nothing, offered

[[Page 13795]]

nothing to oppose the stated intentions of the President in this way?
  There is currently no legislation pending for a vote in either 
Chamber, House or Senate, which passes this test. Senator Cruz has 
offered language, but they are not willing to allow it to come up for a 
vote. As a result, both the House and Senate packages should not be 
supported. Congress should not adjourn until it has firmly stood 
against the President's unconstitutional and dangerous action.
  The American people are asking for us to help. They are pleading with 
us to help. We must answer their call. We must fight for the lawful and 
just system of immigration that we can be proud of. Let's put this into 
a bigger picture. Wages are down. Labor force participation is 
declining. The percentage of people in the working ages who are 
actually working has been declining steadily. Indeed, it has not 
reached a level this low since the 1970s.
  Since 2000, the Federal Government has lawfully issued nearly 30 
million immigrant and foreign work visas--for people to come to this 
country to work--almost 30 million visas to legally work in the United 
States or permanently reside in the United States. During this time, 
the number of Americans with jobs--Americans with jobs--declined on 
net. On net, fewer U.S.-born workers ages 16 to 65 had jobs in 2014 
than in 2000. Amazing.
  There are fewer people working today--even though the population has 
increased--than in 2000. The President's planned work permits for 
illegal immigrants is in addition then to the already huge flow of low-
wage labor into the United States.
  We have a problem, colleagues, with Americans needing jobs. We do not 
have too few workers. We have too few jobs. I would contend that that 
is pretty clear because wages are down.
  If we had a shortage of workers, wages would be up. When you have a 
surplus of labor and surplus of workers, wages decline. According to 
the Wall Street Journal, in 2007, a family income of 4 would amount to 
about $55,000, on average. It has now dropped to $50,000. That 
represents a huge diminishment of the wealth of America. Is it not time 
we did something for American workers? Who do we represent? Do we not 
represent the people of this country? Do we not know we cannot--while 
we believe in immigration, we respect and admire and love immigrants, 
we ought to have a lawful system. The number of people who come ought 
not to be so large that it destabilizes our labor market. Is that not 
the right policy for a great country to pursue? The American people 
have begged and pleaded for this system. I believe we ought to give it 
to them.
  Let me sum up one more time here. What we are seeing in the bill 
presented by the majority, and demanding that it pass the Senate today, 
is a bill that just provides money. It does not deal with any of the 
policy problems in any real way that would end the lawlessness and end 
the belief by people around the world that if they can just come to the 
United States, particularly if they come as a young person, they will 
be allowed to stay. We have not acted to end this belief in any 
effective way.
  It could easily be done. We do not need a law to fix that. We have 
looked at it. Some legal changes could help. But, first of all, the 
President needs to act.
  The House is putting up some money. They are saying it has got to be 
used for some of the things that would be beneficial to ending this 
flow. But even then, we have seen the President does not have to use it 
and does not have to comply with their vision to end immigration into 
America.
  So the President has set this up. He issued his amnesty documents, 
his policies, and encouraged more people to come to America. If he does 
this new Executive order amnesty, it would encourage more adults to 
come to America. It just will. It will weaken the moral authority of 
all our immigration laws. You cannot take these kinds of actions--as 
somebody who has been in law enforcement for a long time, you cannot 
take these actions and think there are not ramifications on them, that 
there are not impacts throughout the entire world and throughout the 
entire law enforcement community, for our ICE officers and our USCIS 
officers working every day dealing with hundreds of these cases.
  You have to have clarity. You have to have integrity. You have to 
have consistency. You have to mean what you say. You cannot say: I am 
for strong borders, and I am for legal immigration, and then present a 
bill that is going to do nothing to change the path we are on. It is 
something I hope our people will look at and pay attention to it.
  This bill is going to go down. It is not going to pass. It should not 
pass. It will be blocked. It will have no chance to pass in the House 
if it were to get out of the Senate. What I want to say to colleagues 
is: It is indicative of the lack of seriousness from the majority party 
when they produce such a poor piece of legislation.
  I wish to remind my colleagues of one more thing. The only way the 
administration can run out of money is if it refuses to spend the money 
that is currently available to it for the border disaster. There is no 
law, no regulation preventing the administration from spending money in 
the current fiscal year. Even the bill they submitted to us, when it 
was examined, showed it only asked for $25 million for this fiscal 
year, through September 30. So it is not the kind of crisis we have to 
rush out and pass a bill today, tonight, or the country is going to 
shut down. They can reallocate funds. But what we need is, and what 
Congress needs to do as a representative of the American people, is to 
say: We are prepared to provide some money, but we need to know, Mr. 
President, that you are serious. We need to know, Mr. President, you 
are going to let your officers do their duty and not block them from 
doing their duty. We need to know, Mr. President, you are not, in a few 
weeks, going to issue a massive administrative amnesty to millions of 
people who will be given work permits to compete in America for any job 
that is out there--any job.
  We need to know where you stand on this. We represent our people. We 
cannot just throw money at this problem, which is what this legislation 
does.
  Let me take a moment to go back and discuss how we got here. We have 
had the current law basically in effect for a number of years: 5, 6, 7 
years. We did not see a spike in entries of young people until the 
President issued an Executive order basically legalizing people of 
youth--up to 30 years of age--who came to America. That was seen around 
the world as an invitation for young people to come. They have come in 
extraordinary numbers, overwhelming our system.
  In 2011, it was 6,000. This year it is going to be 90,000. What a 
huge surge that is. It should never have happened. Now we are reduced 
to being here in the Congress and having the President come to us 
demanding billions of dollars to fund this program and deal with the 
crisis his policies created. Because it is true, and has been true, the 
young people who come to America turn themselves in to the immigration 
officers, who then take them to the Health and Human Services officers 
and turn them over to them. They go out and find housing. That is why 
we have seen this all over the country. Find housing for them. Months 
go by, or, if anyone comes to pick them up, they are turned over to 
them. They do not inquire if they are legally here, those who come to 
pick them up. They expect no proof that they are related to the child.
  Maybe it is a 17-year-old. Most of them are older teenagers who pick 
them up, and they are released on a permiso or bail and they never show 
up. Nobody has the time or the numbers or the capacity to begin to go 
look and see why they didn't show up in court. But if we get a traffic 
ticket and don't show up in court in Alabama, California, Texas, 
somebody is coming after us.
  This is the way the system is being collapsed in America today. It is 
just a tragedy. It breaks my heart. The American people have never 
approved of this.
  So word got out and we had this surge, and now the President, without

[[Page 13796]]

any real plan to fix it, comes forward and says: Give me $4 billion--
the bill here I think is $2.7 billion--without any clear commitment or 
proof that we have any plan or any commitment from his leadership to 
alter the dynamics of the situation we are in.
  This is not acceptable. The bill before us now is not acceptable. It 
will not pass. It will not become law. We need to insist--the American 
people will continue to insist--that this Congress and this White House 
do their duty to make sure we have good, sound immigration laws and 
then ensure they are faithfully and fairly executed to serve the 
national interests of the United States.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Booker). The Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I am glad that people have decided to speak 
about immigration reform.
  This body passed overwhelmingly--Republicans and Democrats joined 
together--a comprehensive immigration bill last year.
  We did it after six hearings during which we received testimony from 
42 witnesses. We had five markups and 37 hours of debate, often late 
into the night, over three weeks. There were 212 amendments, of which 
136 were adopted, all but three of them on a bipartisan bases. Staff 
and Senators, Republicans and Democrats, worked together throughout 
that time, and the Senate, by a better than 2-to-1 margin, passed a 
comprehensive immigration bill. It was supported by people from the 
right to the left.
  It went over to the other body. In the other body there were enough 
votes to pass it. And what happened? The Republican leadership said: 
No, we will not bring it up. And so it died there.
  Today, faced with a surge of migrants from Central America, they are 
giving great speeches: Oh, my God. We have to do something about 
immigration. Why don't we do something about immigration? And then they 
blame Democratic President Obama.
  My response is: What are you doing? They could have brought up the 
bill. We would be a lot better off had they brought it up and voted on 
it. Vote yes or vote no. That is what we are supposed to do. The Senate 
did that, and we passed it.
  The Republican leadership is so afraid they might actually have to 
take a stand on immigration. They might actually have to vote yes or 
no. It is so much easier to do nothing, just to let it sit there and 
say: Oh, it must be President Obama's fault. Oh, it must be the 
Senate's fault. Oh, it must be somebody else's fault. Or maybe it is 
the fault of these 6- and 7-year-old children who are trying to escape 
being killed or molested, the 12-year-old girls who are afraid they are 
going to be raped by gangs, the 12-year-old boys who are going to be 
forced into gangs or be shot in front of their families.
  It is so much easier to say: This is terrible. It has to be President 
Obama's fault. Let's sue him.
  What I say is: Why don't you have the courage to vote yes or no on 
the immigration bill we sent you?
  I defy any one of them to go home during August and say: Oh, we have 
to do something about immigration. I hope people ask: How did you vote? 
Well, they didn't vote yes and they didn't vote no. They didn't vote at 
all.
  I spoke in this Chamber earlier this month about the importance of 
living up to our own principles and traditions by addressing the influx 
of unaccompanied Central American children because it is a humanitarian 
crisis.
  While there is no easy solution, the Border Supplemental 
Appropriations Bill offers a chance to make a downpayment on a strategy 
to address this crisis comprehensively, in accordance with our legal 
obligations and moral values.
  The supplemental was described by the Appropriations Committee 
chairwoman Senator Mikulski yesterday. We know it is significantly 
different than the bill put forward by the House Republican leadership 
this week. The House bill provides $1 billion less than the Senate to 
help unaccompanied children currently in the United States and $700 
million less to support the Departments of Homeland Security and 
Justice so they can effectively address this issue and adjudicate these 
children's cases appropriately.
  There is nobody in this body or the other body, if they have children 
or grandchildren, who has to worry about them going hungry or has to 
worry about them living in fear every day. Let's get out of our ivory 
tower and pay attention to what is happening.
  As I said earlier, the House ignored our bipartisan comprehensive 
immigration reform bill. Thirty pages of policy reforms included in the 
House supplemental and all it does is support their enforcement-only 
agenda to get rid of these children. Just throw them out. Let's pretend 
we have no responsibility. Send them back to face whatever horrors back 
home.
  While many of these children and families don't qualify for 
international protection and would be better off not risking the 
dangerous journey, which the Senate bill seeks to address, many others 
have legitimate claims to protection because of the violence and 
persecution they have suffered in their home countries.
  That is why this is a humanitarian issue. That is why we can't expect 
other countries with far fewer resources--such as Jordan or Turkey or 
Ethiopia--to accept far larger numbers of refugees from outside their 
borders if we are not willing to do our part.
  The little country of Jordan is being overwhelmed by hundreds of 
thousands of refugees from Syria. We say: Oh, thank you for doing that. 
Here we are talking about a tiny percentage compared to the size of our 
country. We say we want other countries to do this--but, gosh, the 
wealthiest, most powerful nation in the world can't. That's not who we 
are as Americans.
  That is why it is unconscionable that the House on the one hand 
recognizes these Central American countries are among the most 
dangerous in the world, where gangs and other violent crime is taking a 
horrific toll on children and families. They will give speeches on 
that, but on the other hand they will say: However, that is their 
problem. Send these children back. Eight-year-old, you can fend for 
yourself against the gangs with machine guns. Go back, and do it as 
quickly as possible because we have to go on recess. We don't want to 
be bothered about you.
  That is why it is also unacceptable that the House would pay for 
their misguided approach in part by cutting nearly $200 million from 
other programs in the foreign aid budget, the very funding needed to 
help reduce poverty, corruption, and violence in Central America so 
children won't flee in the first place.
  Critics of the administration want to point fingers, but blame games 
aren't going to solve this problem. There is no single cause. It didn't 
occur overnight. It has been building for years as drug cartels, 
responding to the insatiable demand for illegal drugs in the United 
States, have migrated to Guatemala and Honduras and El Salvador.
  It is caused by members of Central American gangs, arrested and 
imprisoned in the United States and then deported, who have resumed 
their threats and extortion and killing sprees with a vengeance.
  It is caused by abusive and corrupt police forces and judges and the 
failure of the Central American governments to address the lawlessness 
and impunity in their own countries.
  It is caused by the lack of educational and employment opportunities 
that are among the reasons Central American youth join the gangs.
  So let's not play politics over something as complex and deadly as 
this. Let's vote for the Senate supplemental. It includes the funding 
needed to begin addressing some of the contributing causes of the 
migration and leaves intact the important legal protections in the 
Trafficking Victims Protections Act.
  The $300 million in the State and foreign operations chapter of this 
bill requires a multiyear strategy to support the efforts of Central 
American governments to dismantle their criminal gangs and combat 
extortion, human smuggling and trafficking and domestic and sexual 
abuse, strengthen their social services, law enforcement, and

[[Page 13797]]

judicial systems, develop child welfare services, and expand programs 
in education and get rid of the barriers to economic growth and 
opportunity.
  It also provides funds for public information campaigns to discourage 
potential migrants from making the perilous journey in the first place, 
and it includes provisions that will ensure vigorous oversight of the 
aid we provide.
  The emergency spending in this supplemental is needed to respond 
urgently and responsibly to this crisis. It is about what we stand for 
as Americans. Let's uphold our Nation's longstanding tradition of 
providing a safe haven for refugees that is engraved in the Statue of 
Liberty, for the well-being of thousands who have fled violence and 
risked everything to arrive at our borders, and for the millions in 
Central America who live every day in fear. Let's give them some hope 
for a better life. Let's pass this bill.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
  Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I thank Senator Leahy for his 
extraordinary leadership on this issue. He serves on the Appropriations 
Committee that has brought us this supplemental appropriation. He is 
also the chair of the Judiciary Committee.
  I had the great privilege for a short period of time to serve on the 
Judiciary Committee--too short a period of time--and saw his 
extraordinary leadership. I know it was his committee that brought 
together an immigration reform bill that would have dealt with some of 
the major problems we have in our immigration system. Through great 
work we got that bill passed in the Senate over 1 year ago.
  I find it somewhat ironic that in the House they are now talking 
about how they can change the immigration law while we have a bill that 
is over there. Pass our bill and it would go a long way toward helping 
this issue.
  I thank Senator Leahy for his leadership on immigration issues and 
his passion on the humanitarian issues we have before us.
  I join Senator Leahy, and I hope the majority of this membership 
will, in support of the emergency supplemental. I hope we can pass it 
today, and I hope our colleagues in the House will also pass it.
  I thank Senator Mikulski, my colleague from Maryland, for her 
leadership as chair of the Appropriations Committee and bringing 
forward a supplemental appropriation that deals with the humanitarian 
crisis on our border.
  We all know about the unaccompanied children on our border. In fiscal 
year 2014 it will equal 60,000. That is an extraordinary number. But 
let me make it clear. It is not because of border security issues that 
we have this problem. When these children approach our border they say: 
We are here. They are not trying to sneak into the United States. They 
are trying to get to our country and then they turn themselves in. We 
know most are coming from Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala, and we 
know the circumstances in those three Central American countries.
  First and foremost, the information they have about the transit and 
welcome in America is different than reality. The reality is that if 
children are transited to our border, they are very likely to be at 
great risk, great risk because of the traffickers who could very well 
abuse them--certainly very costly transit--and give them information 
that is not accurate about the laws of our country.
  If they make it to our border, what happens is they are put in 
deportation. There is no right to enter America. We have to evaluate 
their circumstance. Those are our immigration laws.
  First and foremost, we want to make sure the people of Honduras and 
El Salvador and Guatemala understand the risk factors and that their 
children should remain in their country.
  But the root cause, as Senator Leahy pointed out, is also the current 
circumstances in these three Central American countries. It is not 
safe. Too many young people have the choice to either join a gang of 
violence or themselves be victimized by violence. The economic 
circumstances in these three countries give little hope for an economic 
future for these children. It is in our interests to partner with all 
three of these countries to deal with the root causes of why parents 
would put their children in transit to our borders at great risk or why 
families would try to come to America and leave their native country.
  So it is in our interests to deal with that, and the supplemental 
appropriations bill that is now on the floor provides $300 million of 
help that we can use to deal with root causes in the Central American 
countries. We can make a difference.
  I will give the dollars for one second. Three hundred million dollars 
might seem like a lot of money, but it is not the billions we need to 
take care of the problems on our border as a result of families sending 
their children to our border.
  We can make a difference. Our development assistance programs work. 
They work. It is part of our national security. We understand that if 
we have stable countries, it provides a more stable relationship and 
strategic partnership with us and other countries, helping our national 
security interests, and we can make a difference.
  Let me remind my colleagues that under President George W. Bush, in a 
bipartisan manner in 2003, we passed the PEPFAR law which dealt with 
HIV/AIDS because we recognized the security of the world was being 
jeopardized by the spread of HIV/AIDS. And guess what. Our PEPFAR 
initiative made a huge consequential difference. Today the landscape is 
totally different than it was just a decade ago. That is because we, 
the United States, showed leadership.
  We can show the same kind of leadership in dealing with the root 
problems in Central America that can make our hemisphere safer--and, by 
the way, help children and help children of the future who could help 
their country and help the global economy. We have programs in these 
countries. We have the Partnership for Growth as one example in El 
Salvador.
  But we have to make it consequential. We have to make it 
consequential to get rid of these gangs, to give economic hope, to deal 
with good governance. The first step is in this supplemental 
appropriation that provides $300 million of help to these countries. 
These children at the border require a humanitarian response from the 
United States.
  I have the honor of chairing the U.S. Helsinki Commission. It is 
known for many things. It is known for standing up for human rights 
globally.
  We have talked about America asking the international community to 
have open borders when there is instability in their community--most 
recently the problems in Syria. We thank the people of Turkey and the 
people of Jordan for having open borders so people can find safe 
havens. We had better take care of our issues at home first.
  We have humanitarian responsibilities, and this supplemental 
appropriation takes care of that, with $1.2 billion to help human 
services to deal with adequate shelter for these children so they are 
properly cared for. That is our responsibility; they have certain 
rights.
  The majority will be returned to the host country in a safe manner, 
but there are many who are entitled to asylum. There are many who have 
been victimized by the traffickers and are in fear of their life and 
there is no safe option and have a right to expect our country to reach 
out in a humanitarian way to take care of their needs.
  This supplemental takes care of that--with moneys for HHS, moneys for 
the Department of Justice--$124 million to deal with the judges so we 
can handle these issues in a prompt manner--to deal with adequate legal 
representation.
  As I mentioned at the beginning of my comments, yes, we have to 
improve our immigration laws. We have already done it. The bill from 
the Senate is at the House. All they have to do is take up our bill, 
pass it, and in a balanced way, representing I think not only the 
philosophical views of the Congress--which can be a challenge at 
times--but

[[Page 13798]]

representing the views of most Americans.
  I hope we will support the supplemental bill. I might also add it 
provides $615 million for wildfires in the West. We know that is an 
emergency, an urgent situation that needs to be dealt with. It provides 
help to our ally and friend Israel, $225 million to replenish the 
missiles that have been used in Iron Dome to shoot down the missiles 
coming into Israel. It is a well-balanced supplemental. It represents 
the best interests of this country, and I urge my colleagues to support 
it.
  Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
  Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I know the Senate is now considering 
whether we should vote on the motion to proceed to the emergency 
supplemental bill. That means under our rules of another century we 
actually don't get to the bill. We have a debate or even have a 
filibuster on whether we should even move to the bill. It was designed 
to cool the passions of the time so the Senate could be the greatest 
deliberative body in the world. However, these procedures now have been 
distorted. We are no longer the greatest deliberative body in the 
world; we are the greatest delaying body in the world. Delay has become 
not only a tactic to come up with better ideas, delay has become an 
outcome unto itself.
  We are facing a serious problem in our country, and I hope we would 
vote on the motion to proceed so we could actually get on the 
legislation for the urgent supplemental funding to deal with three 
crises facing our country, one of which is wildfires burning in the 
West, in which property, communities, and livelihoods are being 
destroyed and first responders are being exhausted. While they are 
being exhausted, local and State funds are being exhausted, along with 
the Forest Service of our own government.
  We need to stand with our neighbors in these Western States because 
this is a calamity. The Presiding Officer was the mayor of a great city 
in New Jersey--Newark. He knows what happens when a hurricane hits the 
city and hits a State. He could tell me and I know he has spoken 
frequently about how New Jersey is still trying to recover from Sandy.
  Well, the fires raging in the Western States are their hurricane. It 
is their tornado. It is their Sandy. I hope we would pass the $615 
million to help our own fellow citizens in the 8 Western States.
  Then we have a treasured ally that is under attack by a terrorist 
organization and needs to defend itself using technology called the 
Iron Dome. They defend themselves by shooting interceptor rockets. It 
is not an offensive rocket, shoot to kill, it is shoot to defend. They 
are using up these rockets at an unprecedented rate, and the Secretary 
of Defense sent a letter to the Congress asking for $225 million to be 
able to replenish their arsenal.
  We also have a crisis in Central America and the violence by the 
narcotraffickers--or the narcoterrorists--that is causing a surge of 
children to come into our country. I hope we will pass the legislation 
which will allow us to get the money that is needed to address that 
situation, and I will elaborate on that in a moment.
  After all is said and done, I hope this will not be another day where 
more gets said than gets done. We need to respond to the needs that are 
presented to us.
  I wish to talk about the children at this time. Much has been said on 
the floor about the current situation, and much has been said about 
President Obama's failed immigration policy; we need to give the 
National Guard police powers.
  I am proud many Senators went down to the border. I myself went to 
the border. I went to see the situation, as chair of the Appropriations 
Committee. No. 1, I wanted to see if there was an urgent need; No. 2, 
what would it take to meet that need; and No. 3, how we can work 
together on a bipartisan basis to protect the children and protect our 
own country. Well, I got an eyeful, and I have to tell you about it.
  I traveled with the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Secretary 
of HHS, Secretary Burwell, down to the border. We went to the McAllen 
Border Patrol station. We also went to Lackland Air Force Base, where 
children are temporarily housed. I had the opportunity to meet with 
great Border Patrol agents, a wonderful faith-based organization that 
is caring for the children, and fantastic young lawyers from the 
University of Texas at Austin campus and St. Mary's Law School. The law 
students and professors are there to make sure the kids have legal 
services on a pro bono basis. They are doing it on their own time. We 
saw a lot. I also had a chance to talk to the children.
  First, I will talk about the number of children. There was talk on 
the floor that made it sound as if we were under siege rather than 
facing a surge. I think there is a big difference between feeling as if 
we are under siege and facing a surge. As of this minute, we are 
talking about 60,000 children. That is a lot of children, but if you 
went to Baltimore to the Ravens stadium, the Ravens stadium holds 
60,000 people. We are not talking 600,000 or 6 million children; we are 
talking about 60,000 children. Maybe it will swell to 90,000 children. 
All 90,000 children could still fit in the new Dallas stadium.
  We are talking about a number so small that it could fit into an 
American stadium.
  We are a country with 300 million people. We can certainly deal with 
60,000 children who are fleeing traffickers, drugs, and sexual slavery. 
Are we not big enough, tough enough, and strong enough to be able to 
deal with that? I think we are. If you could see what has been going 
on, you would know what I mean.
  Let's talk about these 60,000 children. It is literally a children's 
March across Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, through Mexico, and 
coming up the Rio Grande. They are not coming across all 1,900 miles of 
the border. They are going to a specific area, and they are crossing 
the river on rafts, swimming, and doing whatever they can to get to the 
border.
  It starts like this: The children either come on their own or they 
come because a smuggler or coyote brings them here. That means some 
mother, father, or aunt in the United States of America, making minimum 
wage, is scraping together the $3,000 to $5,000 the smuggler is 
charging to deliver--kind of like a FedEx or UPS for human beings--
these children to the Rio Grande border. The violence is so bad that 
they are willing to trust a crook to bring the children to this 
country.
  These children trek through a jungle, through filth and dirt and 
danger. They stop at what they call safe houses. That is an oxymoron; 
there is nothing safe about a safe house. There are children with all 
kinds of different people on that road. These people take advantage of 
the children. I won't describe it.
  From this safe house, they finally make it to the border by a train 
called The Beast. The Beast is a cargo train. This is not a lovely 
train that goes up and down our coast from Boston to Savannah. This is 
a train called The Beast. The children ride on the top of these trains, 
holding and clutching to each other. I talked to a 9-year-old girl who 
said that she rode for 2 days and had to stay awake for 48 hours 
because she was worried about falling off and losing an arm or leg or 
death itself.
  Why would children risk this? Why would parents risk this? It is 
because of the danger, danger, danger in Central America. We are 
talking about arming the border more. We need to go after these 
criminals and arm our law enforcement officers so they can fight the 
narcotraffickers in Central America. We need to deal with our 
insatiable appetite for drugs that fuels and is driving this movement.

[[Page 13799]]

  When they send the children back, what are they going to send them 
back to? We are sending them back to countries that are recruiting boys 
to engage in criminal activity, and girls are recruited into human 
trafficking. It is not as though we are going to send them back on a 
plane and Juan Diaz will be there with yellow roses saying: Welcome 
back, children of Honduras and El Salvador. They will go back to the 
very danger from which they ran.
  When I went to the McAllen Border Patrol station, which is really a 
detention facility--it was designed to detain adults--underline that 
word. It was designed to hold up to 300 people, usually illegal 
immigrants trying to cross the Rio Grande. These really look like 
cells. They are cement cinder block facilities that were designed to 
hold 10 or 12 adults, and they hold as many as 20 or 30 children who 
are sleeping on the floor.
  The Border Patrol is doing the best they can. The Border Patrol is 
taking care of children because we can't move them to humanitarian 
facilities as the law requires. The children are taking turns sitting 
on a cement block to even be able to rest. There are 20 or 30 in a room 
sleeping on the floor and using empty water bottles for pillows. They 
have blankets that look like aluminum foil. These are the lucky ones. 
They are able to come in from the overfilled outdoor area, where the 
boys are often put in a covered area where they sleep outside. The 
girls can be ``inside,'' but they are in these holding cells. They have 
very limited showers and very limited hygiene.
  The Border Patrol is doing everything they can. It is not something 
we are used to seeing in the United States.
  I know there is another codel going to the border. Go, go, go, go. Go 
and see this.
  I talked to a 12-year-old girl. She was in charge of bringing her 6-
year-old sister to the border. Their parents sent them here to escape 
the gang violence. The mother told the older girl to watch out for her 
younger sister. They said to her: Don't let her out of your sight until 
you get to America, and then try to get to your aunt.
  I talked to a 15-year-old girl from Honduras. Both of her parents had 
been killed by gang violence. She worked in a restaurant to save enough 
money to pay the coyote. It took her 2 months to get to the United 
States. She escaped violence along the route to get here.
  Are you going to send her back? Are you going to send the 6-year-old 
back? Wow.
  I then had the opportunity to see what the conditions were like for 
these children. If you talk to the border law enforcement agents, they 
want to be law enforcement guys. Gee, are they terrific. They know the 
surge at the border has been caused by the criminal activity here. They 
talked openly about it. There are seven organized crime syndicates that 
are sparking a lot of this. They know about the false recruitment of 
young people who are promised a new way and new day to get to the 
United States of America. They know about that, and they want to be 
able to do what they were hired to do--law enforcement. But in order 
for them to be able to do what they need to do, we have to have the 
facilities for the children to be housed, clothed, and fed while their 
legal status is being determined under the law.
  I went up to Lackland Air Force Base. The children are being cared 
for in unused dormitories that once housed our Air Force. We have new 
facilities for our enlisted personnel. Did you know we pay for that? 
The Department of Health and Human Services has to pay the Department 
of Defense to house those children. It is on a military base with all 
the rules and regulations associated with that. It is the most 
expensive housing we have, but it is the best housing we have right now 
because of this rejectionist fear that is being promulgated through our 
country that somehow or other these children pose a danger to us. It is 
the best we can do.
  I will say that it is a very nice facility. It is operated by a 
faith-based organization, the Baptist Conference. My hat is off to 
them. I speak now as a professionally trained social worker. It is one 
of the most outstanding child welfare service organizations I have 
seen, from the nurses to the social workers.
  They are doing a fabulous job, but they are under a contract. 
Although they are a voluntary, faith-based organization, they are being 
compensated for their time and services because that is what we should 
do. We want to be able to use such groups all over America. What was so 
heartwarming to me was that Catholic Charities, based in Oklahoma, came 
to Texas to see what the Baptists were doing because they were getting 
ready to take care of the kids. That is the American way--Catholic 
Charities learning from the Baptists.
  They were all concentrating on the welfare of the children. They know 
these are all children in God's eyes and should be treated with 
dignity.
  I then talked to the legal services people--the lawyers, law 
professors, law students from the University of Texas at Austin and St. 
Mary's College. The services they were providing were on their own time 
and their own dime. They are using their money and their summer 
vacation to help these children. There was no compensation, even for 
expenses, so they could begin the interview process to determine if any 
of these children had the opportunity to voluntarily return home. It is 
clear the coyotes misled them.
  Well, we can't keep doing this on this emergency patchwork basis. We 
need the urgent supplemental, No. 1, to help Homeland Security's law 
enforcement and help Health and Human Services. They need to crack this 
backlog, and they need to be able to place these children in a proper 
facility. They need to determine if they have a right to refugee 
status.
  Even when you have volunteer legal services such as the outstanding 
work I saw in Texas--outstanding. I know the Presiding Officer is a 
lawyer and would have been proud of these volunteers and the way they 
were responding to these children. They also offered bilingual 
services. They need more help, for example, from paralegals.
  They need help to pay for the backlog of cases. We need to make sure 
we have enough immigration judges.
  There is so much myth, so much misinformation, and so much distortion 
out there that I am afraid we will end this day and still not have had 
a vote to proceed to the urgent supplemental. Debate it, discuss it, 
and then let's vote on it or else it will languish.
  As a social worker, I want to say that what I have seen these 
children go through is unimaginable. They have come here to escape 
violence and death. They deserve to be treated with compassion and 
integrity, and they deserve for us to do our job. Anyone who thinks we 
should just deport these children without giving them every right 
afforded them under our law should go down to McClellan and look into 
their eyes and listen to their stories.
  The time to act is now. Let's put together a comprehensive program, 
and I believe we can meet this surge, deal with the root cause, and be 
able to function in a way in which we are all proud.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.


                        Internet Tax Freedom Act

  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, the Internet has been possibly the most 
significant force driving our economy over the past 16 years. It is 
clearly this century's shipping lane and history's most powerful 
communications tool. Part of the reason the Internet has revolutionized 
American life is that it has been protected from discriminatory 
taxation, thanks to the Internet Tax Freedom Act, first enacted 16 
years ago.
  This law, as we might expect, is extraordinarily popular among the 
American people, and it has obviously been of enormous importance to 
the millions of families and businesses that use the Internet each day.
  However, in a few short months the Internet Tax Freedom Act is set to 
expire. If it does, millions of American Internet users could face 
multiple and discriminatory taxes from thousands of state and local tax 
collectors around the country. That cannot be allowed to happen. 
Congress needs to come together on a bipartisan basis and say

[[Page 13800]]

clearly: Don't hit the Internet with discriminatory taxation.
  Sixteen years ago I was the author of the Internet Tax Freedom Act, 
along with our former Republican colleague, Congressman Chris Cox. 
Along with our colleague from South Dakota, Senator Thune, and 52 
bipartisan cosponsors, I am the author of the pending bill that would 
make that protection permanent. I believe if we were able to hold a 
vote on our bill today, it would pass with overwhelming support. 
Unfortunately, that is not a political reality. Yet the clock keeps 
ticking toward expiration.
  Protecting the Internet and every Internet user in our country ought 
to be a matter that takes precedence over politics and partisanship. 
The Senate can move this short-term extension today while the Senate 
works on a bipartisan basis to deal with the issues raised by those who 
believe that allowing localities to collect taxes across the country is 
more important than a ban on discriminatory taxation.
  I hope the Senate will join me in supporting the temporary extension 
of the Internet Tax Freedom Act as a bridge to permanent legislation.
  To reflect very briefly for a minute, we thought this law would work 
well 16 years ago. To describe what triggered my interest, 16 years 
ago, when I was a young Member of this body and I had a full head of 
hair and rugged good looks, we would hear for example about how if 
someone bought the newspaper--the online edition of the paper--they 
would face a stiff tax in some jurisdictions, but if they bought the 
snail mail edition they wouldn't face the tax. Democrats and 
Republicans coming together said that is discriminatory. That is 
discriminating against technology, against the future, against the 
promise of the Internet.
  We thought this proposal would work well. It is quite clear. We just 
have to make sure what we do online is not more burdensome and an 
endeavor that involves more taxes than what we do offline. That is what 
the bill has been all about. So we thought it would be promising, but 
it has far exceeded our expectations in terms of what it has done to 
promote innovation and for small businesses and others who don't have 
political action committees and don't have big lobbies advocating for 
them. Ensuring they are not hammered by multiple and discriminatory 
taxes by thousands of localities has been a lifeline in terms of their 
being successful.
  I could take more time this morning. We have colleagues and of course 
many matters still to deal with before we leave. I hope that given this 
history, which has been a bipartisan history--I so enjoyed working with 
our former colleague Chris Cox on this legislation 16 years ago. My 
take is that the overwhelming number of Senators would like to 
permanently reauthorize this ban on multiple and discriminatory taxes 
on the Internet today, and that is what Senator Thune and I have sought 
to do in our legislation, which has more than half of the Senate 
cosponsoring it. That is not possible today. But what is possible is 
that we act now so we don't bump up against that deadline that if 
reached our small businesses are subject--we have more than 5,000 
taxing jurisdictions, and if even a small number of them were to 
inflict discriminatory taxes on Internet commerce, that would be a big 
blow in a fragile economy.
  So for purposes of the temporary extension of the Internet Tax 
Freedom Act as a bridge to permanent legislation, let us say loudly and 
clearly that we as a body--we as the U.S. Senate--are not going to 
hammer the Internet with multiple and discriminatory taxes.
  I yield the floor. I note the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. BOOKER. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Baldwin). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                          Veterans Health Care

  Mr. BOOKER. Madam President, I rise today to urge support for a 
successful veterans health care program that will be extended if we 
pass this bipartisan package of Veterans Affairs reforms.
  My colleague across the aisle Senator Heller and I have joined to 
introduce legislation to extend the Assisted Living Program for 
Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury, or AL-TBI, and give it the kind 
of support veterans with these severe brain injuries deserve.
  I am grateful for the leadership of Senator Heller and his 
partnership on this very important critical issue. I am proud to work 
with him, and I am hopeful all of our colleagues will join to pass the 
bipartisan package of VA reforms which now includes our legislation.
  I thank Senator Sanders, Ranking Member Burr, along with Senators 
McCain, Pryor, Murkowski, Landrieu, Johanns, and Baldwin for joining 
with us in this important effort.
  This program places veterans suffering from moderate to severe 
traumatic brain injury, or TBI, in privately run facilities where they 
receive 24-hour team-based attention.
  These are our veterans who stood for us, who answered the call to 
service, who went into harm's way, and have suffered traumatic brain 
injury, who now need to get the kind of care and attention they 
deserve.
  They are immersed in this therapy that helps them with their 
movement, their memory, their speech, their gradual community 
integration. That last point is actually the key. This program does not 
just prepare veterans for transition from one health care setting to 
another health care setting; it is about giving them the practical 
skills they need to return to their communities and live independently.
  That is what is so special about this program.
  This is the kind of innovative work that Senator Heller stands for in 
his community and I in New Jersey and that all of our veterans across 
the country should have. Congress should support this kind of work more 
often.
  This past week I had the opportunity to visit a facility in 
Plainsboro, NJ--one of several facilities using this program. While I 
was there, I spoke with an incredible veteran named Gary.
  Gary first enlisted in the military and completed his tour in the 
Navy after graduating from high school. Then 9/11 happened, and Gary 
stood up, reenlisted, this time with the National Guard, and served in 
Iraq.
  During his time there he suffered a traumatic brain injury. Upon 
return home, Gary was confined to a wheelchair and the doctors told him 
he would never ever walk again. But then he began treatments through 
this program that Senator Heller, myself, and others are trying to 
extend.
  Now, because of this program, Gary can walk again. He, himself, and 
his family called it a miracle. He is now using a cane. When he is 
indoors he can walk without assistance.
  Gary's sister told me that before receiving this unique care through 
the program, Gary was very negative, often depressed, often angry. But 
now that he has made progress, Gary's whole attitude has changed. He is 
more than upbeat. He is social and enjoys cooking. In fact, he offered 
to cook me a meal, which, I say to Senator Heller, as a bachelor, I 
take all the meals I can get.
  Another veteran named Duane sustained a traumatic brain injury in 
2003 while serving our country in the Navy. Unable to live 
independently or get around without the aid of a wheelchair, this 
gentleman, this honorable veteran, who was not even 25 years old, found 
himself living in a nursing home alongside a population many decades 
his senior.
  In 2011, through this program in our legislation, his life was 
changed. He moved into a specialized facility in New Jersey, where he 
still lives today and receives a range of treatments, including 
physical, occupational, speech therapies, as well as psychological 
counseling and residential assistance.
  He is making incredible progress. I saw it with my own eyes, heard it 
from his family and his care workers. He has

[[Page 13801]]

actually also traded his wheelchair for a cane and manages a regime of 
his own chores, adding more dignity to his already exemplary life of 
courage. He has an active social life. He has friends and comrades, and 
he believes he has a country that has been there for him when he is in 
need.
  These are the heroes who stepped up to serve our country when we 
needed them most, and now it is our responsibility to serve them with 
the extension of this incredible program.
  This program means independence for these veterans with severe brain 
injuries. We cannot cut their or any other veterans' care short. This 
is a cost of war. We should not just be there to spend resources when 
we are sending them off; we should be there with open arms and support 
when we are welcoming them home.
  The VA now offers no alternative program to the one I have 
described--no alternative program--that provides the same kind of 
comprehensive, rehabilitative, long-term care in a residential setting. 
These brave men and women who are benefiting from this specialized care 
were willing to put their lives on the line for our country. It should 
not be an option; it should be our obligation to take care of them when 
they return home.
  I strongly urge my colleagues in the Senate to do their duty, to pass 
this reform package, and extend this life-changing program.
  I want to again thank Senator Heller.
  If I may yield to him, he has been a stalwart partner, a leader on 
this issue. I have been encouraged by this opportunity to work together 
with him. I am only disappointed that he would not shave his head, as I 
have. That would have shown true bipartisan camaraderie. But despite 
that, I look forward to his continued leadership on issues for our 
veterans, and now I look forward to his remarks.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. HELLER. Madam President, let me begin, if I may, by thanking my 
friend and colleague, Senator Booker, for partnering with me on this 
critical piece of legislation that helps our Nation's veterans, 
especially those suffering from traumatic brain injuries. I would urge 
him to participate in that meal from that veteran. I assure the Senator 
that in this city where the food is so rich, he will probably find the 
meal much healthier--much healthier. I know that is important to the 
Senator. Having said that, I know that Senator Booker and I have always 
viewed veterans issues to be truly a bipartisan issue. I am pleased we 
were able to work together and we were able to accomplish this work as 
partners.
  I would also like to applaud my other colleagues, Senators Sanders, 
McCain, and Burr, for their work on the conference report, and also 
House Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Miller and the rest of the 
conference members for reaching an agreement to ensure that Congress 
keeps its promise to our Nation's veterans.
  The conference committee's bill is a good start to address problems 
with appointment wait times, VA scheduling practices, accountability, 
and overall quality of care provided at VA's medical facilities.
  As my colleague Senator Booker discussed, there is a very critical 
provision in the conference report legislation that he and I took a 
lead on addressing; and that is the extension of the Assisted Living 
Program for Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury. I applaud my friend. 
I applaud my colleague for the ability and the opportunity to work 
together. So I thank him for that.
  As a member of the Senate Veterans Affairs' Committee, I was eager to 
resolve this issue because of its impact on Nevada's and our Nation's 
veterans, and together we were proud partners.
  This program operates in two locations in Nevada and serves wounded 
warriors who are trying to restore their quality of life.
  As the battlefield has changed over the years, so have the injuries 
that servicemembers and veterans sustain, including traumatic brain 
injuries. TBI is a complicated injury to treat because the effects can 
be both mental and physical--from headaches, dizziness, and irritation, 
all the way to speech difficulties, visual impairment, loss of memory, 
and severe depression.
  Every traumatic brain injury is different, which is why some veterans 
need more advanced care to rehabilitate and regain their full 
independence.
  That is why Congress created the assisted living TBI pilot program in 
2008. Under that program, veterans can access a full range of 
rehabilitation services in a residential setting, including physical 
therapy, speech therapy, occupational therapy, and other activities to 
prepare veterans to return home and live a productive life.
  When I found out the program would be expiring and the VA was 
prepared to start kicking veterans out, I teamed up with Senator Booker 
to introduce legislation to extend authorization of this program for 
another 3 years.
  At a time when the VA is facing a health care crisis and access to 
timely care, it would have been unacceptable to let this critical 
program expire, leaving veterans in Nevada without a comparable 
alternative to treating this serious injury.
  I wish to thank the conference committee for listening to us when we 
expressed the urgency of extending this program so veterans could 
continue receiving residential rehabilitation. I am also pleased the 
conference committee provided a 3-year extension so veterans can have 
the certainty that this program will remain in place for the next few 
years.
  I also wish to thank Representative Cassidy from Louisiana for his 
work in pushing this issue in the House of Representatives, as well as 
the veterans service organizations that fought alongside of us for this 
extension. It is our responsibility in Congress to ensure veterans 
across this Nation receive timely and quality care from the Veterans' 
Administration. Senator Booker and I share this commitment.
  I am pleased we were able to work together to get our legislation 
into the final compromise. As the Senate prepares to vote on final 
passage of this critical VA reform bill, I hope my colleagues recognize 
the importance of this compromise bill at a time when veterans are 
losing faith in the VA system and need certainty that Congress will be 
there to provide oversight, accountability, and legislative action to 
approve the care they receive from the Nation they sacrificed for and 
served.
  I yield the floor and 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. REED. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                    Unemployment Insurance Benefits

  Mr. REED. Madam President, I come to the floor today to once again 
press for action on my bipartisan legislation to restore emergency 
unemployment benefits. Over 3.5 million Americans have lost benefits 
since the program expired last December. The need to help these 
individuals, their families, and the economy remains compelling to all 
of us.
  In April, Senator Heller and I were able to draft a bipartisan bill, 
and with the help of many of our colleagues, the Senate acted to 
restore these benefits. Unfortunately, the House Republican leadership 
has refused to take up the Senate-passed bill or consider their own 
proposal. While the President has occasionally talked a good game about 
the need to extend this aid to job seekers, it has never been made a 
``must have'' by the administration. Indeed, it is hard to understand 
why an extension of these benefits was not included in the President's 
supplemental appropriations request.
  So as we consider this supplemental appropriations bill this week, 
which includes critically important emergency funding measures, it is 
somewhat disheartening that extending unemployment insurance, another 
emergency need, has once again been ignored.
  In the past 6 months, the national unemployment rate has dropped from 
6.7 to 6.1 percent. The long-term unemployment rate has dropped just 
below 2

[[Page 13802]]

percent. It is great to see these positive strides in our economy. But 
I strongly disagree with those who would argue that these signs of 
improvement suggest that emergency benefits are no longer needed. Let 
me underscore a few reasons why emergency unemployment benefits are 
still necessary.
  First, while the long-term unemployment rate has dropped from 2.3 
percent in January to just under 2 percent in June, the current level 
is still significantly higher than at any other point when emergency 
benefits were allowed to expire. In June 2008, under President George 
W. Bush, when the long-term unemployment rate was just 1 percent, a 
supermajority of Members in both Chambers voted to create emergency 
unemployment insurance benefits for the long-term unemployed. That was 
at 1 percent.
  Now we are about twice that. Today our long-term unemployment rate of 
about 2 percent means over 3 million Americans are out of work through 
no fault of their own, and have been searching for work for more than 6 
months. These individuals are struggling. With each passing month, 
their financial situation becomes increasingly dire. They should not be 
held to a different standard than those who were searching for work in 
2008.
  Second, the long-term unemployed are still struggling mightily to 
find work. According to a recent report by economists at the Federal 
Reserve, when you look at the likelihood that someone will find a job 
in a given month, the rate for the long-term unemployed is roughly the 
same as it was at the height of the great recession several years ago. 
In fact, someone who is long-term unemployed is almost twice as likely 
to stop looking for work altogether and fall out of the labor force as 
they are to get a job.
  These difficulties in finding work are persistent across educational 
levels and age groups, although they are much more pronounced among the 
African-American and Latino communities. So we are seeing people who 
are trying very hard to find work but they are facing the same 
obstacles they were facing at the height of the great recession.
  Again, I think this underscores the need to help these people. Some 
have argued that the improvement in the labor market is driven by 
Congress's failure to extend emergency benefits. According to this 
argument, taking away unemployment insurance benefits pushes people to 
step up their job search. I find this argument very difficult to accept 
when you face people back in my home State of Rhode Island who have 
been looking desperately, in a situation where there are usually three, 
four, five, six applicants, in some cases, for every job. They are 
looking and looking and looking. In Rhode Island, our unemployment rate 
is tied for the highest in the Nation. It is not the position we want 
to be in.
  To suggest that these people are not desperately searching for work 
really sort of, I think, demeans them unnecessarily. We all know, 
because we go home. There are people who have been looking. They are 
skilled. They are talented. They have worked for 20 years. They want to 
work. Getting the $300 a week, perhaps, in benefits is nothing like the 
salary they commanded. It will not, in the long term, pay for their 
mortgage, pay for their children's education, pay for the necessities 
of life. They know that. They are in a desperate situation. This 
assistance helps a little bit.
  Not only the contact we have with our constituents but recent 
research also demonstrates that this argument is flawed, that ``just 
cut off the benefits and everybody goes right back to work.''
  We can use North Carolina to test the impact of cutting benefits, 
because that State took steps in July 2013 to terminate unemployment 
benefits for anyone who has been out of work for 20 weeks or more. If 
opponents of extending unemployment insurance are correct, North 
Carolina's policy change should have led to significantly sharp 
declines in its unemployment rate.
  A recent article in the New York Times by Justin Wolfers, an 
economist with the University of Michigan and the Brookings 
Institution, explores evidence from North Carolina to assess this 
claim. According to his research, when North Carolina is compared with 
other Southern States that did not cut their programs, North Carolina's 
economic growth ``looks quite similar to its peers, and certainly not 
better.'' The levels of job growth in North Carolina are similar to 
neighboring States such as South Carolina that did not change their 
programs. Dr. Wolfers concludes that, ``There's simply no evidence . . 
. that cutting benefits cuts unemployment.''
  Others have argued that cutting UI at the State level will save money 
and help the economy of the States. In response, eight States decreased 
the number of weeks an individual could receive State-level 
unemployment insurance benefits. However, a recent report from the 
Economic Policy Institute suggests these States did not save 
significant amounts of money or boost employment. This is further 
evidence that cutting UI benefits is simply not a good idea.
  The refusal by House Republicans to renew unemployment insurance 
benefits does not just hurt individuals and families for each week they 
do not get this modest support. The effects are more far reaching, with 
research suggesting that the long-term unemployed will be hurt for 
decades to come.
  According to research by a senior economist at the Federal Reserve 
Bank of Boston, ``workers unemployed for more than 26 weeks experience 
a much larger negative income effect and have lower earnings even after 
10 or 15 years than those workers that experienced shorter-duration 
unemployment spells.''
  Many are forced to rack up debt on their credit cards just to meet 
basic level needs.
  A recent Gallup poll also shows that nearly 20 percent of individuals 
who were unemployed for 12 months have been treated for depression. 
This is a serious blow not just to your economic well-being but to your 
identity, to your sense of worth, to your sense of being able to help 
your family and provide for your family. These effects are long term 
and very serious.
  This rate of depression is twice as high as for those who have been 
unemployed for just a few weeks. So there is, apparently, a 
correlation.
  The impact is far-reaching for individuals, their families, and the 
economy as a whole. It undercuts, again, the notion that there is no 
cost or that there is some benefit to cutting these benefits. There is 
a long-term cost.
  One of the aspects too, is in order to qualify for these benefits, 
you have to be actively searching for work. Without these benefits, the 
incentive to look for work is, in some respects, diminished. Indeed, 
other phenomena take place: the lack of resources, the increasing 
desperation and depression.
  Again, it is encouraging to see that there are signs of economic 
improvement. It is encouraging to see that some of the long-term 
unemployed have found jobs. We dipped below that 2-percent level.
  But that does not mean we should turn our backs on those who are 
still looking. That does not mean we should treat them differently than 
we did people in 2008 in the same position in a difficult economy 
looking for work. Those of us who continue to fight for the long-term 
employed--I must also say that Senator Heller in this effort has been a 
stalwart. We have heard lots of excuses and a lot of discussion, in my 
view, of flawed arguments about how we should abandon the program, and, 
more pointedly, abandon these people. I don't think we should.
  What is certain in terms of analysis is the nonpartisan Congressional 
Budget Office estimates that our failing to renew this program last 
December will cost over the course of this year 200,000 jobs. And this 
emergency aid helps families make ends meet until they find work.
  One of the great ironies here is that in refusing to extend these 
benefits, we basically shut down 200,000 jobs in this country. It is 
almost absurd. It is a catch-22: We are shutting the doors on the 
unemployed so we can get them to work, but yet the analysts will tell 
us that if we had extended benefits, we would have gained 200,000 jobs.

[[Page 13803]]

  Why? Because these payments go right back into the economy. Someone 
who is unemployed is going to take that modest check, about $300, $350, 
and pay the phone bill so they can call about work, they are going to 
get the car repaired so they can get to the job interview, and they are 
going to do the things they have to do to help their children get 
through the day. They are not going to save it or buy French 
impressionist paintings. They are going to go right into the local 
economy and spend the money.
  For many reasons this is why I think we have to do it. That is why 
Senator Heller and I have filed an amendment to this emergency 
appropriations bill, on a bipartisan basis. The amendment will be the 
same as we have proposed previously, except for offsets, because for 
the second time offsets we have identified to pay for an extension of 
benefits have been used for another measure. I guess we must take some 
satisfaction that we have developed offsets for restoring emergency 
unemployment insurance and then another program grabs them and it gets 
passed here. But I would rather have the extension of benefits too.
  So we are moving forward. I hope we can. I am committed to fighting 
for these American workers so they won't be left behind now and in the 
years to come.
  Madam President, I encourage my colleagues to join us.
  I yield the floor. 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. VITTER. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum 
call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Hirono). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                            Border Security

  Mr. VITTER. Madam President, I rise to talk about the crisis at our 
southern border and the need for unified action to deal with it and the 
need to come together on a commonsense enforcement approach that 
undoubtedly will need some additional resources, but also clearly 
demand some changes to the current law so we may quickly deal with the 
need to quickly deport folks illegally coming over our Mexican border 
back to their home country.
  In the case of alien children, we need to get them out of the hands 
of criminal gangs and reunite them with their families in their home 
country. That is an obvious need in the eyes of the American people. I 
think a vast majority of Americans realize we need that sort of 
approach which starts with much better enforcement of our southern 
border, and, yes, if people do get across, they need to quickly deal 
with their situation and quickly and effectively deport them. That is 
the approach we need. Sadly, that is not what the President has 
proposed, and that is not what Harry Reid is even allowing us to vote 
on on the Senate floor.
  For a couple of weeks, at least, after this crisis hit the first page 
of the newspaper, President Obama constantly pointed to those parts of 
the law that he said tie his hands in terms of quickly and effectively 
deporting some of these individuals. He pointed to the 2008 changes of 
the law over and over and over again. The problem is that a couple of 
weeks after that--when he actually sent a proposal to Congress to deal 
with the crisis--any mention of that was gone. There was no suggestion 
of any change in the law in that regard or any other regard. The only 
request he made was for $3.7 billion--a huge amount of additional 
money. The great majority of that money is to feed, house, and relocate 
these illegal aliens, including unaccompanied alien children, within 
our own country.
  The problem with that is it will encourage this flow of illegal 
immigrants into our country and this problem will continue to grow. It 
will not discourage it and it will not end it. We need that 
comprehensive approach--including necessary changes to the law and 
enforcement--to quickly deport these folks to their home countries and 
reunite them with their families.
  In the absence of the President leading us in that regard, I came up 
with my own legislation. I introduced it in the Senate, and I have now 
introduced it as a floor amendment to the spending bill which Senator 
Reid is bringing to the Senate floor. It would change the aspects of 
the law that we need to change in order to streamline the process and 
allow us to quickly deport individuals within 72 hours so they can be 
safely reunited with their families in their home country. That is the 
only thing that will stem this increased tide, this increasing flow, 
and this increasing problem.
  There has also been a lot of debate about the resources that are 
necessary and the increased spending that is clearly necessary. But 
before we pass the President's proposal, we need to marry it with these 
enforcement measures and these changes to the law. We need to pay for 
that enforcement and deportation and not simply pay to feed and house 
these illegal aliens within our country. We need to actually relocate 
them to other places within our country with no foreseeable end in 
sight. We can't do that unless we get the right enforcement measures.
  I also have suggestions on how we can help pay for whatever increased 
enforcement, border security, and quick deportation we need. I have two 
suggestions in particular. I have two specific bills which I introduced 
some time ago in the Senate. I introduced each of these bills this week 
as amendments to the spending bill that Harry Reid is bringing to the 
Senate floor.
  One is S. 1176, which is a freestanding bill, but I also introduced 
it as a floor amendment. It is called the Remittance Status 
Verification Act of 2013. What is this about? This is about remittances 
by illegal aliens in this country and how they are sending money back 
to families and others in their home country.
  The GAO--which is a respected nonpartisan organization--previously 
noted that the United States is the largest remittance-sending country 
in the world, with the majority of funds being sent to Latin America 
and the Caribbean and substantial amounts of money also being sent to 
Asia and Africa.
  In the past 10 years the total number of international remittances 
has increased by 8 percent in 2013, and is expected to grow 10.1 
percent in 2014 and 10.7 percent in 2015. It is reaching an 
astronomical number. In 2015, it will be over half a trillion dollars.
  If folks are working in this country legally, that is fine. We don't 
want to hassle them or make any problems for them. But, clearly, a 
significant portion of the folks we are talking about are here 
illegally and working illegally. That is wrong, and we need the 
legislation I am proposing to fix that, with four important goals in 
mind.
  First of all, we need to see if the folks who are sending these 
remittances are here illegally; second, we need to ensure U.S. taxpayer 
fairness; third, we need to address inaccurate U.S. data on remittances 
and collect all the facts; and, fourth, we need to make sure that 
illegal aliens who are receiving U.S. benefits are--we need to see if 
they are remitting higher amounts abroad.
  My legislation would address all of these goals and would 
fundamentally get a handle on the situation and make sure that those 
who are not in this country legally pay a substantial fee, and that fee 
would be used on border security and other immigration enforcement. 
That could grow a significant amount of revenue specifically dedicated 
to border and other enforcement.
  The second proposal I have is in the form of other freestanding 
legislation, which I also introduced this week as a Senate floor 
amendment for the supplemental appropriations bill. It is about child 
tax credits. This amendment addresses a clear loophole in the IRS code 
that allows illegal aliens to access income-tax-based benefits, such as 
the child tax credit and the additional child tax credit.
  According to the Treasury Department's inspector general--again, this 
is not some partisan Republican source, it is the Obama 
administration's inspector general for Treasury. They

[[Page 13804]]

issued a report recently that said $4.2 billion--with a B--is sent each 
year to folks who are probably here illegally and do not qualify under 
these programs. We send them a check, a refundable tax credit, and it 
costs the taxpayers $4.2 billion.
  As the inspector general has said, there is a pretty simple way to 
fix this by requiring a valid Social Security number or other 
appropriate identification number. This approach is straightforward, it 
is simple, and it will fix the problem. It would cut down the $4.2 
billion--with a B--worth of spending that we are sending improperly and 
illegally to largely illegal aliens and illegal alien families. We can 
use those resources, instead, on enforcement.
  Those are simply two specific suggestions that I filed this week in 
the form of Senate floor amendments that could help raise the 
additional resources we need to address this issue.
  Again, I want to emphasize that we need to do a number of things, and 
it is not all about throwing money at the situation, particularly when 
most of that money under President Obama's proposal is simply to house 
and feed these folks who are here illegally and then distribute them 
throughout the country for an indefinite period of time. Fundamentally, 
we need to marry that with real enforcement measures, including those 
addressed and listed in my bill. I hope we take that approach. I hope 
Senator Reid allows that debate and allows those votes. Right now he is 
lying across the tracks. The only thing he is allowing a vote on is 
this spending measure which just gives the President a blank check. 
That will not solve the problem. That is not the correct response. We 
need to do all of the things, broadly speaking, I have laid out. I hope 
we do that and come together--as, in fact, the American people have--
around my commonsense approach with a clear consensus.
  I thank the Presiding Officer, relinquish the floor, and suggest the 
absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                              Health Care

  Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I wish to speak about health insurance. 
We notice that nationally and back in our States, the angst over the 
Affordable Care Act--often derisively referred to as ObamaCare--has 
subsided. In part, that has occurred because more people are being 
covered. As a matter of fact, in the first tranche of signups of people 
who did not have insurance, over 8 million people--which exceeded the 
goal of 7 million--by the time the cutoff came for signing earlier this 
year, over 8 million people had signed up. And that was just a narrow 
population of those who wanted insurance but could not afford it. Then 
they had it available through the State exchanges or the Federal 
exchange in the States.
  Another part of the population that did not have health care was 
people who were actually in a low-income situation; therefore, there 
was no chance they could afford it. That is why we expanded Medicaid in 
the Affordable Care Act to up to 138 percent of poverty, which is a 
very low level of income. I believe, if I remember correctly, for a 
family of four, it is somewhere around $32,499 of annual income. Well, 
we can imagine that with a family of four, people can't even think 
about having the money to provide health insurance with that kind of 
limited income, and that brings them up to 138 percent of poverty.
  The only part of the Affordable Care Act, since it was declared by 
the Supreme Court as constitutional--the only part that was struck down 
as unconstitutional was the part of the law that was mandating upon the 
States to expand Medicaid, which is funded by a State and Federal joint 
program, up to 138 percent. So it made it voluntary. Well, half of the 
States have expanded it and about half of the States have refused, such 
as my State of Florida. The Republican Governor and the Republican 
legislature, not wanting to have anything to do with what they were 
condemning as ObamaCare, refused to expand Medicaid in Florida and 
thereby refused to give health care to a population, if my colleagues 
can believe this, of 1.2 million people in Florida--people who would 
have had health care but do not get it because the State legislature 
and the Governor refused to raise the level.
  By the way, that was taking Floridians' Federal taxpayer dollars of 
51 billion over the next several years that were allocated for that 
purpose and refusing to accept them for the health care of poor 
Floridians, over 1 million people. That seems unconscionable.
  This stuff is so complicated. People don't realize that in large part 
that is, in fact, what happened over the course of the last two 
legislative sessions--that they could have expanded health care in 
Florida, and it is Floridians' tax dollars they are giving away instead 
of letting that apply to health care for Floridians.
  Nationwide, if I recall correctly, it was somewhere around another 
6.7 million people were brought on with the expansion of Medicaid even 
though States such as Florida were refusing to expand it, and that is 
in addition to getting health care to those who could afford it with 
subsidies or because of better rates could afford it in the first 
place. That was a group of another 8 million.
  We can see we are starting to chip away at that group of people in 
the country who had no health care because they had no health 
insurance. Yet, when they got sick, where did they end up? They ended 
up in the emergency room. They couldn't pay. Of course, now it was an 
emergency because they had no preventive health care. And since they 
couldn't pay, who do my colleagues think pays? All the rest of us pay 
in our insurance premiums. It is estimated that in a State such as 
Florida, for the average family health insurance policy, people are 
paying upwards of $800 to $1,000 of their premiums per year just to 
take care of the group who ended up in the emergency room because they 
didn't have any health care. That is part of what the Affordable Care 
Act was intended to do.
  Another part of the Affordable Care Act was to save Medicare from 
going into bankruptcy. Back in the early part of the last decade, we 
passed a nice-sounding law called the prescription drug bill. As its 
name suggests, it was to provide prescription drugs for senior 
citizens. Omitted in the explanation of it was that not only were 
people paying premium prices that the government had always gotten as a 
discount, but now the government was paying a premium price with no 
discount for all the drugs under Medicare. But a part of that was 
setting up Medicare being delivered by an insurance company with a 
fancy name called Medicare Advantage.
  Always before, if we were going to deliver Medicare through a health 
maintenance organization--an HMO, which is an insurance company--one 
would expect it would bring the costs down per person. That is how it 
started out--about 95 percent of the per-person cost in Medicare, 
regular Medicare fee-for-service. But, no, in the prescription drug 
bill, this was turned upside down. Now they were going to offer 
Medicare through an HMO, but the reimbursement from Medicare was going 
to be 14 percent above Medicare fee-for-service per person, reimbursed 
to the insurance company at 114 percent of Medicare fee-for-service. As 
a result of that, Medicare was going broke.
  That was another reason for the ACA--to stop Medicare from going 
broke by winnowing down that 14 percent and giving incentives to the 
insurance companies to do what ought to be the goal, which was quality 
of care instead of just paying a dollar percentage value per patient. 
Thus, we have the re-created Medicare Advantage, and it is being rated 
on its quality so that seniors can vote with their feet by going to the 
better rated insurance plans in Medicare Advantage.
  Why am I retracing all of this? To get to this point: For this next 
round of Medicare Advantage, we are just getting to the point of having 
the insurance companies announce their rates.

[[Page 13805]]

Some of them are going to go up. Some of them are going to go down.
  But I want the people of Florida to know that 2 years ago in their 
State legislature they took away the legal power of the insurance 
commissioner of Florida to approve the rate hikes. They took that away. 
I happen to understand something about this. Before I came to the 
Senate, I was the elected insurance commissioner of Florida, and I 
jealously guarded the ability to approve rate increases and decreases 
in order to protect the insurance consumer. The Florida Legislature 
stripped that ability of the insurance commissioner--now appointed, not 
elected--in Florida. Therefore, if they see rate hikes for Medicare 
Advantage in this next round just about to be announced--they took the 
ability of the State regulator to limit the rate hikes. That sounds 
unconscionable. It certainly does. Every year insurance companies are 
going to try to raise their rates. It is the job of a State regulator 
to regulate what happens to those rates. So the Florida Legislature 
last year passed senate bill 1842, and one of the things it did is it 
stripped the Office of Insurance Regulation of one of its chief 
responsibilities--regulating health insurance rates. That is after 
Florida had had some of the strongest laws governing insurance, and 
that was the case when I was insurance commissioner 15 years ago, where 
I could not only approve rates but I could reject rate increases.
  Well, we saw this at the time a year ago. I contacted the Governor 
and urged him to veto the bill, but, sadly, it is the law of Florida. 
Therefore, that is why I come to the floor today, because I am 
disappointed in the news reports that are starting to say that these 
rate increases in Florida are being blamed on the Affordable Care Act. 
They are being blamed on ObamaCare.
  Well, the insurance commissioner used to have an opportunity to look 
at those rates and say they were not right and to stop those rate 
increases or to give a rate increase that was actuarially sound. Not 
any more. There were a lot of other things that had been done in our 
State of Florida to stop the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. 
First of all, our State refused to accept a planning grant in order to 
get ready for the Affordable Care Act before it was ever starting to be 
implemented.
  I have already told you about refusing to expand Medicaid to cover 
more than an additional million people in Florida who otherwise would 
not get health care.
  What was the purpose of the ACA other than trying to save Medicare--
which it has done--financially from disaster? It was to help make 
insurance coverage available and affordable. There were provisions in 
there, technical terms like ``medical loss ratio,'' that said that an 
insurance company had to give 80 percent of the premium dollar back in 
health care instead of giving it off to CEOs' salaries and executive 
perks; and if they did not, what the insurance company had to do--if 
they did not get 80 percent of the premium dollar back in health care 
to the patient--they had to return that part in refunds.
  I can tell you that, happily, that law is working. One million 
Floridians last year received over $41 million in refunds. It was an 
average of $65 per family. Why? Because some insurance companies did 
not spend enough on medical care for their policyholders.
  Another part that we had talked about was making private insurance--
remember how they said this was going to be government health care--
private insurance companies selling insurance. People could afford it 
because there were subsidies for families with income up to the level 
of 400 percent of poverty. Well, of the 1 million Floridians who 
enrolled--and remember, I gave you the figure that 8 million nationally 
enrolled. Of that 8 million, 1 million people needed and wanted 
insurance so much in our State alone that they enrolled, and 91 percent 
of them were able to receive a subsidy under the graduated subsidy 
level in order that they could purchase that private insurance. The 
folks who bought a plan using subsidies reduced their premiums through 
the subsidies by an average of 80 percent.
  So what we had in health insurance before the Affordable Care Act was 
not--it was like the Wild West. Plans could deny you coverage. An 
insurance plan, if you had coverage and you were suddenly getting 
treatment, could cancel your coverage. They could also deny you 
coverage by saying you had a previous existing condition, and it could 
have been something as simple as a rash. You could not get health 
insurance. Now all of those things they cannot use as an excuse.
  So what I see is the last throes of this resistance to the Affordable 
Care Act, and you are going to hear it again as insurance plans come 
out on Medicare Advantage and show that they are hiking their rates. 
Yet I want the people of Florida to know it was the State legislature 
that took away the ability of the Insurance Commissioner of Florida to 
regulate those rates.
  Madam President, I would like to clarify my previous remarks. I was 
referring to the removal of the authority to regulate private insurance 
rates by the state insurance commissioner in SB 1842, not Medicare 
Advantage.
  I yield the floor and 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. COBURN. 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. COBURN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in 
morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                                  Debt

  Mr. COBURN. Madam President, this is my 10th year in the Senate. 
Every time we come to a close of the session for a summer break or for 
a holiday break all of a sudden we start hearing all these unanimous 
consent requests--they come to the Senate. For those of you who are 
listening to this and to my colleagues, these are requests that bills 
be passed without a vote. I am fine with that, as long as they meet 
certain characteristics and considerations.
  But what the American public does not know is that about 70 percent 
of the work the Senate does happens by unanimous consent, with no 
recorded vote on the back of any one Senator. Today is no different. I 
have heard of five or six requests for unanimous consent. They are fine 
with a couple of provisions. The first provision is they ought to be 
within the powers of Congress as enumerated by the Constitution in the 
enumerated powers. The tendency is: Oh, we have to do this; it has to 
happen now. For some of the things that is true, but the reason it has 
to happen now is because we had not done it before now because we 
failed to do it. We utilize the end of the session to force people to 
give on positions they would never give on otherwise because they do 
not want to take the heat for being responsible for stopping something 
from happening, even though it might not fit within the enumerated 
powers, it might not be under our constitutional authority.
  But the most egregious of all of this is the fact that we are going 
to be asked today, probably 7 or 10 times, to pass pieces of 
legislation the very cost of which will fall on the backs of our 
children and our grandchildren--not us. With over $400 billion in waste 
per year in the Federal Government--waste, fraud, duplication--to ask 
us to spend $200 million here or $2 billion here or in the case of the 
veterans bill, $17 billion, of which $5 billion of it is actually paid 
for, without doing the hard work of not transferring more debt to our 
children is not acceptable to me.
  So my rights as an individual Senator are going to be utilized 
today--until we go home--to make sure we do not transfer another penny, 
if I can stop it, onto the backs of our children. It would be different 
if we were efficient, if we did not have any waste, if we did not have 
any fraud, if we did not have any duplication. But you see, it is an 
excuse to not do the hard work we were sent to do.

[[Page 13806]]

  So I am putting my colleagues on notice that if they want to pass any 
bill that is going to go by unanimous consent, they better find some 
waste somewhere to offset it with or I will object. I do not mind 
taking the heat, no matter what the issue. I have done it before, I 
will do it again. Our children and our grandchildren are worth any 
amount of heat that creates a future opportunity for them that is at 
least as equal to what we have had.
  I wanted to say that before I start talking about the veterans bill. 
I voted for the veterans bill that went out of the Senate. My 
background as a physician and businessman--businessman first, a 
physician second, regrettably a politician third--but I voted for that 
because I thought in conference we would actually fix it. What is wrong 
with the VA? Leadership, a culture of corruption, a culture of not 
caring. That does not apply to all of the VA employees, it does not 
apply to all of the VA hospitals, but it certainly does apply to a 
number of them.
  How did we get there? I would note for the record that VA spending is 
up 60 percent since 2009. Let's start in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 
2014. It is up 60 percent. Patient demand is up only 17 percent in that 
same period of time. The number of providers has increased by 40 
percent. So it surely cannot be a problem of money.
  If we look at the increased utilization of those services over the 
next progressive 10 years, it will be less than 20 percent. We did some 
good things in the bill in the Senate, most of which are capped, but we 
did not do enough. If we are going to manage the VA, we have to give 
the head of that organization the ability to be able to manage it. 
Senior Executive Service, the Secretary of the VA is going to have that 
capability to hire and fire. For a very limited number of title 38 
employees--those are hospital managers, physicians--for a very limited 
number, he will have that as well. But for where we have seen a lot of 
the problems, he will not be able to fire people who have directly 
harmed our veterans.
  So we have not given him the tools to create the environment and the 
change that has to happen and a cultural change that has to happen in 
the veterans organization.
  The other thing I would note is that if we look at the requirement 
for primary care physicians and physician extenders--nurse 
practitioners and PAs--their load is about one-fourth of the load of 
private practitioners in this country. That is not true clinic to 
clinic, but on average that is true. In Oklahoma we have some great 
physicians who work every night until 10:00 taking care of veterans. We 
have great caregivers in lots of instances. But we have a lot of 
stinkers, and on average we are not demanding of them what the private 
sector routinely does.
  One of the good things in the bill is we are going to finally have VA 
hospitals and clinics reporting outcomes, just as every other hospital 
in this country has to report. If they take Medicare or Medicaid 
dollars, they have to report to CMS their outcomes--their readmissions, 
their death rates, their infection rates, their quality of care. They 
have to be reported.
  Also, physicians have to be credentialed. Not true in the VA. So if 
they are not credentialed, the VA patient is going to know what their 
credentials are--if they have lost their medical license.
  Those are positive aspects of this bill. What is not positive is the 
fact that we won't fix the real problem, and we are going to say we did 
and we are going to spend our grandkids' money saying we did over a 
very short period of time, and we are still not going to hold the 
organization accountable.
  It is unconscionable to me, after a 60-percent increase in funding 
over the last 4 years, that we would borrow against our children's 
future an additional $12 billion when we have all this waste throughout 
the Federal Government and in the VA and say that is the best Congress 
could do. I think that is an incrimination upon Congress, and it is a 
dereliction of our duty--to our Republic but also our future.
  So I will be doing a couple things:
  No. 1, I will be raising a point of order against this bill; and No. 
2, I will be voting against it.
  Let me say a little bit about why I am voting against it. Yesterday I 
talked to a Vietnam veteran who is 100 percent disabled and presented 
to the emergency room of a major VA hospital in this country with chest 
pain. This patient was observed for 2 hours. She had no acute changes 
on her EKG, but she had--as any doctor would know--unstable angina. Her 
pain never went away. She was sent home. In less than 48 hours she 
presented to an emergency room in her local community and an hour after 
that had three stents placed in her left coronary artery. She was 
ignored medically. That is happening today as we have had this 
discussion.
  Another wonderful retired veteran in Oklahoma had to have a knee 
replaced. She was service-connected. She went to the VA and had her 
knee replaced. It was a failure. She had to have it done again. A 
couple years later her other knee needed to be replaced. They replaced 
her knee. It failed. As they replaced the second knee, as can happen, 
they fractured her femur. Today she has a replaced knee, and she walks 
with a terrible limp because her left leg is 1\1/2\ inches shorter than 
her right one. The likelihood of that happening to one individual is 
about 1 in 10 billion, but the outcomes never get reported. A femur can 
break while doing a knee prosthesis, there is no question about it. But 
five major surgeries? That means outcomes don't compare.
  When this VA episode started soaking in, as a physician I went to the 
medical literature and looked at all the studies that have been 
published on VA care. I did a LexisNexis. I looked at them all. What 
did they show? VA care is better than anyplace in America. That is what 
the studies show. Except when we drill down on it, what we find is the 
way they were cheating on appointments is the way they were cheating on 
outcomes. In other words, the outcomes weren't accurate. So the culture 
is one of looking good, protecting those within the VA, and not 
protecting our veterans. Again, I would say that does not apply to all 
VA employees. The vast majority of them are great. But the leadership 
has stunk. We have to have a bill that fixes that. I don't believe this 
is going to do it.
  I also wish to talk about whistleblowers because I have had a 
multitude of whistleblowers whose complaints I have investigated and 
found to be truthful. The culture at the VA against whistleblowers has 
been a channel in the past from whistleblowers back to management. And 
what happens to them? They get fired. They get demoted. They get 
harassed. They end up ultimately leaving. These are the people who 
care, who want to make it better.
  There is a big job ahead of Secretary McDonald. He has the capability 
and he has the experience to fix this but only if we give him the 
tools. My fear is that we will not give him the tools with this bill.
  The final point I would make, and I think we all ought to think about 
it--every American ought to think about it. Remember, we are an All-
Volunteer Army right now. If somebody has served this country in 
combat, putting their life on the line to protect us, to protect our 
way of life, to protect the very freedoms we cherish, should that same 
individual ever be at the back of the line on anything related to 
health care that is associated with their service? They should be in 
the front. They should be ahead of every Senator, every President, 
every doctor. They should get the first care, not the last. They should 
get the best care, not the worst. That is how it ought to be. It is the 
veterans VA system, not ours. It is for them. And when they no longer 
are the object of service by this country, for them, for their 
sacrifice, then we are in a whole lot more trouble than any of us 
realize. We have turned things upside down. Union representation at the 
VA is more important than the VA patient. Benefits for VA managers are 
more important than the VA patient.
  The one critical thing that really needs to happen to clean up the VA 
is to give veterans the absolute choice to go wherever they want, their 
freedom

[[Page 13807]]

to choose whatever care they want based on what they have done for us. 
By doing that, the VA will either have to become competitive and just 
as good or they should die. We have not done that in this bill. We need 
to do that in this bill.
  We have centers of excellence in the VA that beat all the private 
industry, all the private health care. When it comes to prosthetics, 
when it comes to closed-head injuries, when it comes to traumatic brain 
injury, when it comes to post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, 
we are great. The VA is great, but in too many areas it is not. Tell me 
this bill will change all that, and I will vote for it even if it does 
sacrifice our children. But it won't.
  I won't be here when the results are assessed, but I can predict what 
they will be--more of the same, too much money and not enough 
leadership.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Heitkamp). The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as if 
in morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                          Affordable Care Act

  Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, before I speak on the topic of 
Affordable Care Act, reports are emerging that the House of 
Representatives is going to adjourn without taking any votes on a 
border supplemental that would allow this country to humanely deal with 
a crisis of epidemic proportions on our border as over 50,000 children 
right now are being warehoused, shoulder to shoulder, without any sign 
from the Congress of help coming.
  There are legitimate differences in what manner we provide this 
emergency funding to try to deal with this humanitarian crisis, but 
shame on the House of Representatives as they leave town today without 
even having attempted to take a vote on a supplemental appropriations 
bill for the border.
  I was in the chair yesterday as I listened to about three or four of 
our Republican colleagues come down to the floor, as they often do, and 
register their ongoing complaints about the Affordable Care Act. As has 
been the trendline over the past 4 months, those complaints have moved 
from those rooted in data to those rooted in anecdote.
  There is no doubt that there are people in every single State in this 
country who continue to have poor interactions with the American health 
care system. It is one-sixth of our economy, and as was the case before 
the Affordable Care Act, it will be the case after the Affordable Care 
Act. There are many people who will still pay too much, and there are 
still plenty of people who will not get enough in return.
  But I wanted to spend a little bit of time on the floor today talking 
about what the actual data shows us, what the empirical evidence shows 
us. It is overwhelming in its conclusion that the Affordable Care Act 
is working--in many respects working better than anybody thought it 
would. So I want to take my colleague's arguments one at a time.
  The first is a pretty simple one. Every bad interaction that happens 
in the American health care system is not the fault of the Affordable 
Care Act. I woke up a couple of days ago with a sore throat, but that 
wasn't President Obama's fault. That wasn't the fault of the Affordable 
Care Act. I had kind of a rough day. But I understand there are bad 
things that are going to continue to happen to me--especially when it 
comes to health care--that cannot necessarily be fixed by the 
Affordable Care Act. So one of the ongoing statistics that is used is 
the number of people who had their plans canceled. Well, most of the 
nonpartisan medical journals that have surveyed the number of 
cancellations before the Affordable Care Act and the number of 
cancellations after the Affordable Care Act suggest this has been a 
problem that has been ongoing for years, that there is substantial 
churn every single year in terms of the number of plans that were 
offered that then are stopped being offered. The Affordable Care Act is 
not solely responsible for the fact that plans are being cancelled. 
People will still pay a lot in premiums. The Affordable Care Act makes 
it better. There are a lot fewer premium increases of over 10 percent 
since the Affordable Care Act was passed than before it was passed. But 
every time somebody is paying more than they would like for the health 
care they receive, that is not the fault of the Affordable Care Act.
  The second argument is the difference between data and anecdote. So 
let me just spend a few minutes talking about what the ongoing 
avalanche of information, of data, of statistics tells us. So many of 
my colleagues come down and talk about the huge rates that people are 
paying for health care and blame it on the Affordable Care Act. The 
average premium that individuals paid for a plan on one of the 
Affordable Care Act exchanges over the course of the first year of its 
implementation was $82 per month--$82 per month. Now, there are some 
people who are paying more, but the average is $82 a month. That is a 
pretty sweet deal to get health care coverage in this country.
  And they needed it. A study showed that 60 percent of adults with new 
coverage used it and 60 percent of those individuals say they could 
never have afforded to get the care had they not had insurance in the 
first place.
  And people like it. Consumer survey after consumer survey shows that 
the majority of people who are on these new plans want to keep them and 
have said their experience has been good, excellent or satisfactory. So 
that is the real story about what is happening on the exchanges.
  What about cost? My colleagues say it really hasn't done anything to 
control costs. That is not the case. Health care inflation in this 
country is at a 50-year low. Medicare spending--that is the money that 
we all pay as federal taxpayers--is $1,000 per beneficiary lower than 
it was projected to be in 2014. So $1,000 in spending per individual 
has disappeared from the system, and a large part of the reason for 
that is the Affordable Care Act.
  We had a bipartisan briefing sponsored by the Commonwealth Fund this 
week, and both the Republican economists and the Democratic economists 
believe the Affordable Care Act, though not solely responsible for that 
reduction in price, is a big, big part of that cost-reduction story.
  People will say it is not coming through on premiums; we are still 
seeing premium increases that are bigger than we would like. Well, they 
are smaller than they were before the Affordable Care Act, but the 
Affordable Care Act also has this provision in it that requires 
insurance companies to spend a certain percentage of all the money they 
collect on care, and if they pad their profits with too much of your 
premiums, then they have to return that money to you. We just found out 
that consumers have already saved $330 million in money that was 
directly returned to them, and over all have saved $9 billion in 
savings on premiums because of this provision, which essentially says 
if you get charged too much, the insurance company now cannot keep that 
money for themselves. They have to return it to you. That is the best 
protection you can have from premiums that are too high. It is not 
theoretical; it is practical--the $330 million in checks written by 
insurance companies and given to individuals.
  The data continues to show us the Affordable Care Act is working, and 
I haven't even gotten into the data I have brought down here week after 
week, which is stunning in terms of the number of people who now have 
insurance: 8 million people insured on the exchanges--a 25-percent 
reduction in the number of uninsured in this country. Even the most 
optimistic of ACA supporters could never have thought we would have a 
25-percent reduction in the number of uninsured in this country in the 
first 6 months of implementation. The numbers don't lie.
  But here is my last point: Senators and Members of Congress who come 
down and complain about the performance of the Affordable Care Act in 
their State, when their State has done everything in its power to 
undermine the Affordable Care Act, have some explaining to do. The 
reality is there are

[[Page 13808]]

States such as Connecticut that are working hard to implement the 
Affordable Care Act, and there are other States that are working to 
undermine the Affordable Care Act. The Affordable Care Act works really 
well in States that want it to work, and it has a little bit more 
trouble in States that are trying to undermine it. Let me give you an 
example that comes from a speech given earlier on the floor by Senator 
Nelson. Senator Nelson talked about how Florida, through its Republican 
Governor and Republican legislature, has taken away from the insurance 
commissioner the ability to approve increases in insurance rates. And 
so, guess what. They are seeing premium increases that are rather 
unappetizing to Florida residents because the legislature has taken 
away from the government the ability to monitor, review, and approve 
those rates.
  Compare that with the State of Connecticut, which is working hard to 
implement the Affordable Care Act and act on behalf of rate payers and 
consumers. Our biggest insurer a couple of months ago proposed a 12-
percent increase in rates under the Affordable Care Act in 
Connecticut's exchange. We have the ability to review those rates in 
Connecticut. We did that, and the insurance commission in our State 
just 2 days ago came back and reduced that rate increase from 12 
percent to 1 percent. Blue Cross Blue Shield is not going to stop 
offering insurance on the Connecticut exchange. They are just going to 
do it with a rate increase that is commensurate with the actual 
increase in costs of care to Anthem rather than a number that is not 
based on actual data.
  So in a State such as Connecticut, where we have seen twice as many 
people enroll as we originally estimated, where we have seen Medicaid 
expansion provide access to insurance for thousands upon thousands of 
Connecticut residents who have insurance in a way that people in 
Florida do not because of their lack of Medicaid expansion, we also 
have taken steps to protect consumers from premium increases.
  So for colleagues who are going to complain about high premium 
increases, you have to acknowledge there are steps that your State 
could have taken to make it better. For colleagues who are going to 
talk about the fact that there aren't enough people enrolled, well, 
then your State could have taken steps to enroll more people.
  Not everything is the fault of the Affordable Care Act when things go 
wrong for families. The data does not back up the anecdotes that are 
brought to this floor. In States that are working to implement the law, 
it works a lot better than in States that are working to undermine it.
  The story is clear. Whether it is a decrease in people that don't 
have insurance, the decreasing rate of medical inflation all across the 
country or the improving quality of health care in every corner of this 
Nation, the Affordable Care Act is working.
  I yield back the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. Madam President, I see two of my colleagues who are here, 
and I want to ask unanimous consent that Senator Barrasso be given 10 
minutes, then Senator Sessions be given 3 minutes, and then the 
remainder of the time be turned over to me.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. HATCH. Did the Chair rule?
  Mr. MURPHY. Reserving the right to object----
  Mr. HATCH. Madam President----
  Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, I would ask that the Senator modify his 
request to allow Senator Bennet to alternate with one of the Republican 
speakers in this series of remarks.
  Mr. HATCH. I was supposed to speak here at 2:15 p.m.
  Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, I will withdraw my request for 
modification.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Wyoming.


                              Health Care

  Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I have come to the floor to discuss 
some of the issues related to the health care law and the side effects 
of the health care law. I see my friend and colleague from the State of 
Connecticut--a place where I spent 5 years as part of my residency 
program training--has just spoken on this issue. So I followed the 
developments in that State quite a bit and talked to many of the 
physicians who practice there on a regular basis, some of whom I have 
studied with for up to 5 years. So they have routinely sent me articles 
about the failure of the President's health care law in Connecticut--
because remember, the President said, actually, that the costs would go 
down, not go up under the President's health care law. I think he said 
$2,500 per family per year. Nancy Pelosi on ``Meet The Press'' said 
costs would go down for everyone--down for everyone. She didn't say 
they would go up a little. She didn't say they would go up at all. She 
said they would go down for everyone, and this was in the last 2 years.
  I come to the floor noting that just the other day in Hartford, CT, 
the headline story said that one of the insurance companies was seeking 
a 12\1/2\-percent rate increase. The Norwich Bulletin says: ``Anthem 
seeks 12.5 percent rate increase.''
  I heard my colleague from Connecticut say the insurance commissioner 
wouldn't allow it to go up that much but did allow it to go up and said 
it was going up; is that what my colleague just said on the floor? 
Perhaps not as much as this, but certainly the President said they were 
going to go down by $2,500 a family. Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the 
House, said they were going to go down for everyone. And in Connecticut 
people who believed the President, people who believed the Speaker of 
the House, Nancy Pelosi, realized they weren't told the truth. Rates 
even after this 12.5-percent request was reviewed and lessened--the 
rates still went up.
  So I look at these headlines.
  Another story out in the Daily Caller: ``Obamacare Update: Now EVEN 
MORE States Report Double-Digit Premium Hikes.'' They talk about 
Vermont and they talk about Arizona, States where premiums are going up 
over 10 percent.
  I looked at the story in Politico last month: Connecticut exchange 
reports breach--breach of security of individual people, hundreds of 
names left on the sidewalk, with Social Security numbers, with 
addresses, with information about them.
  A story coming out of the Connecticut Mirror: ``CT's Latinos face 
hurdles in enrolling in ObamaCare.'' It says: ``No group of people in 
Connecticut is more likely to be uninsured than the state's Latinos, 
and ObamaCare won't change that.''
  I just heard from my colleague that it is working. Not according to 
the press in his home State.
  July 1, 2014, the Connecticut Mirror:

       Federal auditors question Access Health CT's internal 
     controls.
       Federal auditors reported Tuesday--

  These are not individual stories of one person or another, because we 
know all across Connecticut there have been families who have been 
dropped, people who have had problems, individuals who are being hurt.
  ``Access Health CT says it will start calling thousands of customers 
Friday''--this was earlier this month--
``. . . 5,784 customers were identified as having incorrect tax 
credits'' under this program that my colleague says is working in his 
home State.
  It says: ``About 3,900 customers,'' in the State of Connecticut 
``were told that they qualified for government-funded Medicaid coverage 
when, in fact, they did not.''
  It says: ``An unknown number of customers got a bill from their 
insurance company that was more than they expected . . . ''
  `` . . . 903 customers were dropped by their insurer.''
  These are the facts.
  So I hear that the Federal auditors are questioning Connecticut's 
internal controls, and then look at the many stories about doctors who 
are saying no to ObamaCare: ``Report: Connecticut is Less Competitive 
After Federal Health Care Reform'' in the Hartford Courant.

[[Page 13809]]

  It just reminds me there are so many side effects of this health care 
law all across the country--stories from every State. Premiums are 
going up, people are having to pay more in copays, people are having to 
pay more in terms of their deductibles, and people continue to be 
offended that they were not told the truth.
  The rates continue to go up. The President said they would go down. 
Nancy Pelosi said they would go down for everyone. That is not the 
case. And I think what I am hearing also is----
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. MURPHY. Madam President----
  Mr. BARRASSO. People believe that Washington is in control.
  Mr. MURPHY. Would the Senator yield for a question?
  Mr. BARRASSO. The Senator will yield for a question.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Would the Senator yield for a question?
  Mr. BARRASSO. Yes.
  Mr. MURPHY. I thank the Senator.
  I appreciate the amount of time the Senator has taken to educate my 
colleagues on Connecticut's success in adding 200,000 people to the 
rolls of the insured. But the chart the Senator just had up next to him 
for the majority of his remarks about Anthem's request to increase 
rates in Connecticut by 12 percent is, frankly, the best advertisement 
you can make for the Affordable Care Act because under the Affordable 
Care Act, States are given the ability to review these rate increases 
and modify them. Connecticut has taken advantage of that, and had you 
read the papers from 2 days ago, rather than taking the headline from 
several months ago, you would have seen that the Connecticut insurance 
commission rejected the 12-percent increase and actually approved a 1-
percent increase.
  Regardless of someone's claim that insurance premiums were going to 
go down, my constituents in Connecticut will be very welcome to take a 
1-percent increase in premiums. Should you repeal the Affordable Care 
Act--parts or all of it--you would remove from many State the ability 
to offer these plans in the first place or to be able to monitor them. 
So I appreciate the Senator putting a month's old headline on the floor 
of the Senate, but yesterday's headline actually tells us that because 
of the Affordable Care Act rates under the exchange for the people in 
Connecticut will be at historic lows in terms of premium increases. 
Given the fact the Senator is putting up news about the State of 
Connecticut, I want to make sure that he is putting up the latest and 
most accurate news about our State.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I didn't hear a question posed in 
that, but I concur. And I mentioned in my remarks, as the Senator from 
Connecticut has said, that the rates were not allowed to go up to the 
double-digit request, although I also mentioned they are going up by 
double-digits in many other States. Yet the President of the United 
States said the rates would go down by $2,500 per family per year. 
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi--who was Speaker when the Member from 
Connecticut was a Member of the House and voted for the health care 
law--said on ``Meet the Press'' that they would go down for everyone, 
and that is not the case. The case is, as I have continued to say on 
the floor of this body, rates are going up across the country even 
though the President promised something else. What people are seeing is 
higher premium rates, higher deductibles, higher copays, and loss of 
doctors. They feel Washington is taking control over their lives. We 
are also seeing lower paychecks in Connecticut as people try to comply 
with the 30-hour workweek requirements, which are causing school 
districts to have to choose whether to hire reading teachers as a 
result of the mandates of the health care law.
  I thank the Presiding Officer.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. Madam President, I understand there will be 3 minutes for 
the Senator from Alabama and then I will be able to deliver my full 
remarks.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  The Senator from Alabama.


                          Veterans Health Care

  Mr. SESSIONS. Madam President, I just want to say how much I 
appreciate the work by all the Members who worked on the veterans bill. 
We had some difficulties of a very serious nature, and all of us wanted 
to fix that. I was not able to support the bill that came out of the 
Senate.
  We learned minutes before the vote that the average cost in the out 
years would be $50 billion a year if the program was funded, and there 
was no money to pay for that. It would really just be adding to the 
debt. It was sort of avoided by saying it would be a 3-year bill, but 
once you start these kinds of motions rolling, they never seem to end, 
and in the end we would be faced with a difficult situation 
financially.
  The conference committee went to work, and I salute all the people 
who worked on this legislation. It has some good policy issues in it. 
Senator Tom Coburn, who spoke earlier, was engaged in that conference. 
He is a doctor. He understands these matters, he cares about them, and 
he was actively engaged, as we all know. In Tom Coburn we have one of 
the Senate's finest, most committed Senators. He loves this country. 
Every day he tries to save us money and make us more productive. There 
is nobody here who works harder or is more effective in addressing that 
issue than he is, and he says we need to do better. He is not able to 
support the conference report because it will add at least $10 billion 
to the debt in 3 years. I will acknowledge that it is better than 
before. As a result, he will raise a point of order against it, and I 
have to say I will support that.
  Our doctors there do not carry the kinds of patient caseloads private 
doctors do.
  While we have some policy changes that are good, more are needed. We 
are going to have a new Administrator, and I am very impressed with 
him. He is a military academy graduate from West Point, spent 5 years 
in the military, and was a Procter & Gamble CEO. He has bipartisan 
support in the Senate. A lot of confidence and a lot of hope is being 
placed in him.
  I think the better action for us today is to not try to establish big 
policy changes that continue indefinitely at great expense. The better 
choice for us today is to wait a bit, see how effective this new leader 
is, and see how much he can save without reducing benefits. Maybe we 
can get some ideas from this top-flight, world-class businessman, who 
can help us develop policies that serve our veterans. We have an 
absolute commitment to serve our veterans and fulfill our 
responsibilities.
  I will support the budget point of order, but if it were to be 
sustained--and it probably will not be sustained because people want to 
go forward and do this--I am confident we would be able to work with 
the new Administrator and develop an even better plan for securing the 
benefits which our veterans have earned and to which they are entitled.
  I thank the Chair and yield the floor.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.


                            Standing Strong

  Mr. HATCH. Madam President, in recent days I have twice spoken here 
on the floor--not about a particular issue, bill, or nomination pending 
before the Senate, but about the Senate itself.
  While issues, bills, nominations, and even partisan majorities come 
and go, the Senate as an institution must remain--and remain not only 
in some tattered form, some distorted shadow of its former self, but, 
rather, the Senate must remain as it was designed to be. The political 
winds may blow, but the institution must stand strong.
  Unfortunately, in my 38 years of service in this body I have never 
seen it weaker than it is today. There once was a consensus here not 
only about the need to keep this institution strong but also about how 
to do it. That consensus evolved from how the Framers designed this 
body so that it could play its unique role in the system of government 
they inspirationally crafted.
  James Madison, for example, remarked at the 1787 Constitutional 
Convention that the Senate's proceedings

[[Page 13810]]

could have more coolness, more system, and more wisdom than the House 
of Representatives. He was not talking about coolness in the way our 
teenagers talk about it today. The House is designed for more or less 
direct expression of the popular will and operates by simple majority. 
By contrast, the Senate is designed for deliberation. For more than two 
centuries it has operated by a supermajority and even unanimous 
consent. This fundamental difference between the House and the Senate 
is by express design and not historical accident. It is the conjunction 
of the two that makes the legislative branch work in the manner the 
Framers intended. This basic principle of bicameralism is above 
politics and above party.
  This longstanding consensus about the importance of the Senate's 
unique design and how it must operate to fulfill its constitutional 
role has all but fallen apart over the last few years. I began 
addressing this problem in earnest last week and will continue to do so 
in the weeks ahead and, I might add, in the months to come, urging my 
colleagues to heed history's wisdom and change course.
  I am not alone in this endeavor. My friend the senior Senator from 
Tennessee has also spoken with great passion on this issue and 
developed a thoughtful assessment of the Senate's institutional decay. 
Two longtime colleagues in this body--one Democrat and one Republican--
offered similar critiques when leaving the Senate in the last few 
years.
  For 30 years I served in this body with my friend from Connecticut, 
Senator Christopher Dodd. In his final speech on the Senate floor on 
November 30, 2010, he observed that the Senate was established as a 
place where every Member's voice could be heard and where a 
deliberation and even dissent would be valued and respected. Senator 
Dodd explained that ``our Founders were concerned not only with what 
was legislated, but, just as importantly, with how we legislated.'' He 
urged Senators to resist the temptation to abandon the Senate's 
longstanding traditions to make it ``more like the House of 
Representatives, where the majority can essentially bend the minority 
to its will.''
  Two years later Senator Olympia Snowe concluded her three terms in 
the Senate representing the State of Maine in this body with a 
reflection on the state of the Senate. She observed that a commitment 
to the rights of the minority helped ensure that the Senate would be a 
body where all voices are heard. Senator Snowe concluded, however, that 
``the Senate is not living up to what the Founding Fathers 
envisioned,'' in large part by ignoring the minority's rights.
  Senator Dodd concluded his Senate service in the majority while 
Senator Snowe concluded hers in the minority, but their assessment was 
the same--a leading Democrat and a leading Republican. That is what a 
consensus looks like. They shared an understanding of the unique role 
the Senate was designed to play in our system of government, and they 
knew from experience that the Senate is not operating by that design 
today.
  Diagnosing our current institutional ills and prescribing a path back 
to health must begin by recognizing the primacy of the Senate's 
purpose, design, and place in our system of government. Without the 
anchor of these principles, which have throughout the Senate's history 
been shared throughout this body, across all partisan and ideological 
lines, the gamesmanship of politics and the quest for power will 
decimate our deliberate contribution to the legislative process. 
Unfortunately, that is exactly what is happening today.
  In my previous remarks, I noted that many of the sage students of the 
Senate--from Vice President Adlai Stevenson in the 19th century to 
Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia in our time--all identified the same 
two features as critical to the Senate's proper functioning: the right 
of amendment and the right to debate. It is not difficult to see how 
they serve the critical function of setting the Senate apart from the 
House. These rights temper majority rule. They emphasize individuals 
over parties and factions. They ensure that all voices can be heard. 
They encourage deliberation and, yes, even beneficial compromise. These 
rights secure a substantive role for all Senators--even those in the 
minority--in how the Senate legislates, a feature that does not exist 
in how the House operates.
  During my service throughout the past four decades, the Senate has 
often lived up to these ideals. For example, I worked with the junior 
Senator from Iowa on the Americans with Disabilities Act, which the 
Senate in 1989 passed by a vote of 76 to 8. At that time Democrats held 
55 Senate seats, just as they do today. This body addressed amendments 
on the floor offered by both Democrats and Republicans on issues 
ranging from tax credits for small businesses to accessibility of 
buses. On a single day in September of 1989, the Senate adopted nearly 
twice as many minority amendments to this single bill than the Senate 
today has adopted in more than a year.
  Today the majority leader uses his right to priority recognition to 
eliminate virtually all opportunities for amendments unless he agrees 
to them, and even then he generally stops amendments. He has used this 
procedural maneuver--called filling the amendment tree--more than twice 
as often as the previous six majority leaders combined.
  There is a time when you can fill the amendment tree, and that is 
after there has been a full and fair debate on all the reasonable 
amendments Members have brought to the floor and it is when a 
reasonable time has been given to a bill and there have been a number 
of votes.
  Yet, when he was in the minority, even he condemned this tactic as 
``a very bad practice.'' He explained that ``it runs against the basic 
nature of the Senate.'' He was right then, but he is wrong now. Perhaps 
the majority leader has reconsidered what he believes to be the basic 
nature of the Senate. Perhaps he now believes that denying the 
minority's right to offer amendments is a very good rather than a very 
bad practice. If he does, then I think he, of all people, owes the 
Senate an explanation. I don't think he believes that; otherwise, such 
an about-face is nothing more than a desire to rig the rules so he can 
win all the games, and in the process he is destroying the Senate 
itself. When I say games, I don't really mean games. It is so he can 
win all the votes. He can put the Senate on any motion he wants to 
without any real rights for the minority, and in the process he is 
destroying the Senate itself, destroying the institutional 
characteristics the Founders thought critical to our government's 
design, and destroying precisely those practices and traditions that 
have enabled the Senate to serve the common good throughout our 
Nation's history.
  The other defining feature of this body--the right to unlimited 
debate--is also under attack. By empowering the minority, that right 
has always annoyed the majority whether we have been in the minority or 
whether we have been in the majority and vice versa. But a little 
history can provide a lot of perspective for us today.
  For more than a century, ending debate on anything required unanimous 
consent. A single Senator could prevent a final vote on a matter by 
preventing an end to debate. The Senate adopted a rule in 1917 that 
lowered the threshold to two-thirds. Not until 1975 was the threshold 
lowered to three-fifths, where it stands today.
  It is easier to end debate today than ever before in the Senate's 
history, but that is not enough for the current majority. Urged on by 
many of the 34 Senators who have not yet ever served in the minority, 
the majority apparently does not want any obstacle whatsoever to stand 
in its way--not even full and fair debate.
  Last November the majority leader used a parliamentary maneuver to 
lower the threshold for any debate on most nominations from a 
supermajority to a simple majority. It took him only a few short 
minutes to end more than 200 years of Senate practice and effectively 
eliminate the minority's role in the confirmation process.

[[Page 13811]]

  As I have detailed here on the Senate floor and in print, the 
minority leader's reasons for this revolution amounted to filibuster 
fraud. At the time he invoked the so-called nuclear option, the Senate 
had confirmed 98 percent of President Obama's nominations, and 
filibusters, of course, were on the decline. But 98 percent was not 
good enough for the majority.
  I noted the current majority leader's about-face regarding the right 
to offer amendments. He defended that right when in the minority and 
actively suppressed it when in the majority. Similarly, when he was in 
the minority, he voted more than two dozen times for filibusters of 
Republican judicial nominees. The Democrats were the ones who started 
that. Then, last November, once in the majority, he abolished the right 
to debate nominations.
  While the majority leader effectively neutralized the Senate cloture 
rule to stop the minority from debating nominations, he has also used 
that rule to stop the minority from debating legislation. He again uses 
his right of priority recognition to bring up a bill and, at the very 
same time, file a motion to end debate. But it makes no sense to speak 
of ending debate--ending what he wrongly characterizes as a Republican 
filibuster--when such debate had no chance to begin with. The majority 
leader uses this cloture rule not to end debate but to prevent it 
altogether.
  Just like the practice of filling the amendment tree, the majority 
leader is using his position to prevent debate far more often than any 
of his predecessors. Unlike the current majority leader, most Senators 
on the other side of the aisle have never served in the minority. Most 
Senators in both parties--56, to be exact--have served here only under 
the current leadership. Unfortunately, this means that most Senators 
serving today have only witnessed leadership that prefers power to 
principle and is rapidly dismantling the longstanding practices and 
traditions of an institution that took centuries to build. The only 
leadership that most Senators serving today have experienced uses 
parliamentary maneuvers to deny senatorial rights so that the partisan 
ends justify the procedural means.
  The current Senate leadership is wrong. The road we are on today 
leads only to one destination. Just as maintaining the integrity and 
foundation of the Senate's design and operation is essential to its 
proper role in our system of government, attacking that integrity and 
dismantling that foundation can only destroy that proper role. Since 
the Senate's proper role is essential for protecting the liberties of 
the American people, destroying those longstanding practices and 
traditions puts our liberties at risk.
  The minority leader spoke here in January about the state of the 
Senate and noted that what many call partisanship today is nothing new. 
But what I have been addressing in recent days is not the result of 
that ideological competition but how that competition is conducted.
  At the beginning of my first term, there were only 38 Republican 
Senators--not even enough to end debate under Senate rules. Democrats 
have not been in such a small minority in nearly 60 years.
  According to the Brookings Institution and American Enterprise 
Institute, 42 percent of all rollcall votes during my first 2 years 
here were so-called party unity votes, in which a majority of each 
party sticks together and votes in opposite ways. That means a majority 
of votes involve Senators reaching across the aisle.
  In the last several years under the current leadership, however, even 
though the margin between the parties is narrower, the percentage of 
such party unity votes has risen to 62 percent. This trend of 
retreating to partisan corners is yet another indication that this body 
is becoming like the House and, therefore, abandoning the tradition of 
unlimited debate and amendment at the core of the Senate's identity.
  The way Senator Snowe described it, the great challenge is to create 
and maintain a system ``that gives our elected officials reasons to 
look past their differences and find common ground if their initial 
party positions fail to garner sufficient support.'' The Senate's 
design provided those reasons and those incentives, and undermining 
that design destroys them.
  Building is much harder and takes much longer than destroying. The 
current leadership's recklessness in choosing power over principle is 
dismantling what took centuries to establish.
  That does not, however, mean it cannot be changed. Senator Dodd 
suggested a formula for a better course when he distinguished what we 
legislate from how we legislate. Restoring the Senate as the world's 
greatest deliberative body requires recommitting ourselves to the 
principles of how we legislate so that we can properly discuss and 
debate what we should legislate.
  We must first restore the longstanding consensus about the rules, 
procedures, and traditions governing how the Senate is run. Only on 
that firm footing can we discuss, deliberate, and legislate in a 
constructive manner.
  In addition to restoring many of this body's fundamental rights for 
amendment and debate, the minority leader spoke in January about 
restoring a vigorous and meaningful committee process. These elements 
of our legislative process are related and they are complementary.
  Increasingly, bills are drafted in the leader's office and taken 
directly to the full Senate for consideration where the majority leader 
will immediately fill the amendment tree and file a motion to end 
debate. In my 38 years in this body, I have never seen a consolidation 
of so much power in so few hands.
  America's Founders were right in the principles of government they 
laid out and in the institutional design they built on those 
principles. But they did so at the beginning of this journey, creating 
the blueprint before anything had been built. I fear that returning to 
the right path may be even harder than embarking on it.
  The majority today has engaged in a hostile takeover of the Senate 
for one simple reason: aggrandizing power. But remember the axiom that 
power tends to corrupt. It makes principle harder to see, fainter to 
hear, and tougher to grasp, and it makes principle very difficult to 
restore. Restoration will require believing in something greater than 
power, something more important than the bill or nomination on the 
calendar, something more significant than the latest polling numbers. 
It will require holding fast to a system that can provide power today 
but take that power away tomorrow.
  Winston Churchill famously said, ``Democracy is the worst form of 
government except for those other forms that have been tried from time 
to time.'' There is certainly wisdom in that, but consider when 
Churchill said it. He was speaking on the floor of the British House of 
Commons on November 11, 1947, 2 years after his party lost half its 
seats in Parliament and the Labor Party led its first majority 
government. Churchill expressed his faith in the very form of 
government that had turned his party into a small minority.
  We continue on the path the current Senate leadership has charted at 
our peril, not just the peril of this institution but the peril of our 
system of government and the liberties it makes possible for the 
American people. This may sound like a grand statement, but remember 
what Senator Byrd repeatedly told us--remember what he said: ``So long 
as the Senate's defining features such as the rights of amendments and 
debate remain intact, the liberties of the people are secure.''
  There is perhaps no greater statement of principle regarding this 
Nation than our Declaration of Independence, which asserts that the 
government exists to secure the inalienable rights of the people. That 
is why we are here, and that should be our reason to change course--not 
simply partisan advantage or ideological superiority but liberty. The 
liberty we enjoy in America did not occur by chance. It will not 
survive by neglect, and it cannot thrive by preferring power over 
principle.
  My staff and I recently visited the National Archives and saw the 
words

[[Page 13812]]

engraved beneath in one of the statues at the entrance: ``Eternal 
vigilance is the price of liberty.''
  I hope we can turn this around. I hope the leadership of the majority 
will wake up and realize that some day they may be in the minority. I 
don't know when, but some day they will be. If they were treated as we 
are being treated, I can just hear the fulminations up and down in the 
Senate. All I can say is that these principles are more important than 
either party. They are more important than either party, and whether 
Democrats or Republicans like them or not, the fact is, this is the 
greatest deliberative body in the world that is no longer the greatest 
deliberative body in the world, and that is because of what is going 
on. I hope we can end that and begin anew.
  I think everybody enjoyed the debate over the highway bill. For once, 
we were able to have at least four amendments--on both sides, by the 
way. And I have to say it was kind of a thrill to vote again on 
amendments. It was kind of a thrill to pass a piece of legislation the 
right way. Whether a person likes or doesn't like the legislation, it 
was thrilling to be here. I would like to see more of that happening so 
that everybody here will feel that not only are they a part of the 
Senate but they are helping to keep the Senate the vibrant place it 
always has been up until now.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
  Ms. HIRONO. Madam President, I rise today to support S. 2648, the 
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act.
  I recently led a congressional delegation to McAllen, TX, and to 
Lackland Air Force Base to see firsthand what the administration was 
doing to handle this border crisis. It was clear to me that the hard-
working men and women on the front lines of this crisis are doing the 
best they can under very difficult circumstances.
  We should pass this important bill to provide the necessary resources 
to fairly address this humanitarian crisis. We should provide Customs 
and Border Protection the resources they need to pay their agents 
overtime when needed, and to provide the necessary food, water, and 
medical supplies to these children.
  My colleagues and I saw children in these CBP facilities as young as 
7. We learned that many of these children arrive severely malnourished 
and dehydrated. They are clearly desperate. They are not traveling here 
simply because they want to. They are fleeing mortal danger at the 
hands of violent drug gangs. These gangs have rendered their home 
countries some of the most dangerous places in the world to live. We 
should be working together to make sure these children are given proper 
care in our facilities and that our CBP agents have the support they 
need.
  It was also clear to me that these CBP facilities, meant to safely 
hold dangerous criminals, are no place for children to be held, even 
for just a few days. This is a view also shared by CBP officers on the 
ground who said this is no place for children.
  That is why I believe it is so important to provide necessary funding 
to the Department of Health and Human Services so they can continue to 
maintain shelter capacity at places such as Lackland Air Force Base 
where we visited. At Lackland, I was given hope. I saw children being 
educated, being taught English, praying if they chose to, and learning 
the Pledge of Allegiance. I saw a place that reflected our values as a 
country.
  This is why I strongly oppose altering the protections of the 2008 
Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act. The answer is not 
expediting screenings and deporting these children as soon as possible 
at the border. All this will accomplish is to send these children back 
into harm's way--indeed, into the murder capitals of the world--even 
more quickly.
  I have actually seen what these expedited screenings look like. 
During our trip we saw small children sitting on concrete blocks in a 
noisy and overwhelming CBP facility. In this environment, these 
children struggle to answer questions from uniformed Customs and Border 
Protection officers. Let me be clear. That officer was doing the best 
he could, but children arriving here after a dangerous journey are in 
no condition to quickly explain their reasons for coming to the United 
States, much less understand the legal basis for their claim to relief 
under U.S. law. When children are asked to provide that explanation in 
the kind of harsh environment we saw in McAllen, they have little 
chance of making a compelling case for asylum or other protection. At 
this facility children cannot access legal help to make their case. 
Many of these children have legitimate legal claims that they have been 
physically abused, raped, or victimized by gangs or human traffickers. 
We must give them a fair chance to tell their stories.
  This bill, which I support, does not repeal these protections. 
Instead, it takes the important steps of funding our immigration courts 
to levels necessary to timely hear these children's claims.
  This bill also helps with legal representation and orientation 
services--something the faith communities and other advocates we met 
with told us were necessary. This will help to speed up the legal 
process, while ensuring that the rights of these children are 
protected.
  Just as importantly, this bill funds our efforts to address the root 
causes of why these children are arriving in our country in the first 
place. It will help us stop drug trafficking from this region and will 
help stabilize these economies that have been ravaged by the 
narcotrafficking violence.
  This past weekend, columnist and commentator George Will eloquently 
spoke on this issue. He said:

       My view is that we have to say to these children welcome to 
     America. You're going to go to school and get a job and 
     become Americans.
       We have 3,141 counties in this country. That would be 20 
     per county. The idea that we can't assimilate these 8-year-
     old criminals with their teddy bears is preposterous.
       We can handle the problem is what I'm saying. We've handled 
     what Emma Lazarus famously called: ``the wretched refuse of 
     your teeming shores,'' a long time ago, and a lot more people 
     than this.

  George Will is right. We are a country that welcomes refugees--as 
many of these children are--from all around the world.
  I urge my colleagues to support this important supplemental 
appropriations measure.
  I yield back my time.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Warren). The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. CRUZ. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                  Unanimous Consent Request--H.R. 3086

  Mr. CRUZ. Madam President, I rise today to speak in favor of a 
principle that should unite us all--the principle of Internet tax 
freedom. One of the great blessings of our modern economy is the 
productivity, the entrepreneurial spirit the Internet has created, the 
ability of anyone with an idea to jump online, to communicate, to 
create a business, to reach the world.
  One of the reasons the Internet has been such an entrepreneurial 
haven is that Congress has wisely decided to keep it free from 
taxation, not to subject the Internet to taxation. Well, unfortunately, 
we are at the precipice of that long tradition changing. If the Senate 
refuses to take action, the Internet will be taxed this November.
  For a decade and a half, Americans have been able to use the Internet 
all across the country free of taxes, and Republicans and Democrats 
have agreed on this basic principle. There is not a lot of agreement in 
this town on much of anything, including what time of day it is. Yet on 
Internet taxes--in 1998 President Bill Clinton signed the law banning 
Internet taxes. Congress has extended it three times--in 2001, 2004, 
and 2007.
  Today there is a bipartisan coalition on the record to keep the 
Internet tax free. The senior Democratic Senator from New York and the 
senior Democratic Senator from Wisconsin both

[[Page 13813]]

publicly support keeping the Internet free from taxation. Conservatives 
in the Senate, such as the junior Republican Senator from Utah, the 
junior Republican Senator from Florida, and the senior Republican 
Senator from Louisiana, agree as well. There are 52 cosponsors in the 
Senate on the bill by the senior Democratic Senator from Oregon, who is 
here with us, to keep the ban on Internet taxes.
  This should be easy. This should be a matter of easy agreement 
because rarely is there an issue that has united parties so broadly as 
keeping the Internet tax free. Yet, unfortunately, this session of the 
Senate is also seeing politicians who want to extend sales taxes to the 
Internet, who want to subject small businesses, mom-and-pops, 
businesses started by people just wanting to build a business, to 
crushing sales taxes from 9,600 jurisdictions nationwide.
  I am passionate in saying we should fight against taxing the 
Internet, and we should not open the door to Internet taxes. The 
average tax rate right now on telephone services and other voice 
services is 17 percent. The average tax rate on cable and video 
services is 12 percent. If this Senate does not act, you are going to 
see consumers in States such as Montana and South Dakota and 
Massachusetts, on November 1, begin paying taxes for having basic 
Internet service. Those State laws are already in effect and will go 
into effect on Internet services.
  I would note for the Senators who represent Montana and South Dakota 
and Massachusetts that come November 2--which, I might note, is right 
before an election day--anyone in those States should be prepared to 
answer questions from their citizens on why the Senate stood by and let 
taxes be raised on their citizens just for having an Internet 
connection.
  Americans are struggling to pay their bills in the Obama economy. 
Life has gotten harder and harder for working men and women in this 
country. Life has gotten harder and harder for the most vulnerable 
among us--for young people, for Hispanics, for African Americans, for 
single moms. The last thing we should be doing is playing politics and 
jacking up taxes on people accessing the Internet.
  I would note that the U.S. House of Representatives has already 
acted. On July 15 the House voice voted H.R. 3086, the Permanent 
Internet Tax Freedom Act. It had 228 cosponsors. My friend Senator 
Wyden has introduced the Senate version of it, S. 1431. It has 52 
cosponsors, including 18 Democrats. This ought to be something where we 
stop playing games and say let's all come together and agree: Do not 
tax the Internet. Yet, unfortunately, we are not in that situation. 
Unfortunately, we are seeing an objection to the House-passed bill, to 
a bill that has the support of a majority of Senators. Why? The only 
reason is because there is hope that by holding the Internet Tax 
Freedom Act hostage, it can become a vehicle to impose sales taxes on 
transactions over the Internet, to impose sales taxes on every small 
business.
  I would note one of many wonderful things. It used to be that if you 
were a single mom and you wanted to start a small business, you wanted 
to make something, you wanted to sit down and make something, whether 
it was a computer program or sweaters for dogs or anything else, it 
used to be that to create a small business took time, it took money, it 
took infrastructure. You had to have in place warehouses and 
distributors. You had to have a mechanism to sell your products.
  Do you know the great thing about the Internet? If you are a single 
mom and you have an idea to start a business, you can put up a Web 
site, and with FedEx you can deliver anywhere in the country.
  Anyone all over the country can do it, if you have an idea. Let me 
tell you, my cousin had an idea to sell scarves. She thought she had 
some good design ideas. My cousin Beatriz worked with her best friend 
to design scarves.
  If you put up a Web site, suddenly you can sell all over the country. 
Well, what would the Internet sales tax do? It would say that when you 
start your business, if you start getting customers, you have to 
collect taxes in 9,600 jurisdictions all over the country. If the 
school district across the country changes its tax rate from 4.5 
percent to 4.75 percent, you have to know that and collect that 
differential tax. This does not make any sense.
  We should stand together united in protecting the entrepreneurial 
haven that is the Internet. We should stand united against taxing the 
Internet.
  I would note that my friend the Senator from New Hampshire has a long 
and passionate record on this issue as well, and I am happy to yield to 
her for a question on this important topic.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Ms. AYOTTE. Madam President, I thank the Senator from Texas for 
coming to the floor to talk about this incredibly important issue to 
the American people.
  I ask the Senator, isn't it true that for 16 years the Internet Tax 
Freedom Act has prevented politicians nationwide from using the Web as 
a piggy bank and has helped commerce thrive by keeping it free from 
burdensome tax restrictions? And isn't it true that by making this 
permanent--the way the House bill does and the way the bill does that 
my colleague from Oregon has offered that has 52 cosponsors in the 
Senate--we never have to allow the people of this country again to feel 
uncertainty that suddenly this great freedom we have on the Internet is 
going to be gone, where they are going to be taxed when they access the 
Internet or that somehow we are going to use the Internet as a way to 
raise money and a way to hurt e-commerce?
  I would ask that of my colleague from the State of Texas. Is this all 
true, that if we can pass the House bill right now--which is similar to 
the bill offered by my colleague from Oregon--we can give the American 
people certainty that we are not going to tax what they are doing on 
the Internet?
  Mr. CRUZ. I thank my friend from New Hampshire. I would note that she 
is exactly right. We have the ability to do something productive, 
something that does not happen in Washington an awful lot. We have the 
ability right now to come together in a bipartisan way for the Senate 
to demonstrate that it can function productively to address the 
economic challenges in this country the way the House has.
  The House is doing its job. The House has passed this bill. It is the 
Senate that has refused to take it up for a vote. It is the Senate that 
is refusing to do its job. We have an ability not just to protect the 
Internet from taxes but also to honor our word. How many Members of 
this body, on both sides of the aisle, go to the tech community and 
say: We want to stand with tech. We want to stand for the 
entrepreneurial vibrancy of tech?
  Yet I would note anyone objecting to this right now is setting the 
stage for a massive Internet tax. How many of us make the case to young 
people that we are standing for the future for young people, we are 
standing for greater opportunity, we are standing for the chance to 
help young people achieve the American dream? You know, young 
Americans, 18 to 29 years old, oppose an Internet sales tax by 73 
percent to 27 percent.
  Yet if this body refuses to stand together in a bipartisan manner, we 
are telling young people: What we say on the campaign trial is not 
backed by action on the floor.
  We ought to come together on what should be an uncontroversial bill, 
a bill that has passed three times before, a bill that was signed by 
President Bill Clinton, a bill that in this body is introduced by a 
senior Democrat. We ought to come together in a bipartisan way to say: 
We stand in unison protecting Internet tax freedom.
  Accordingly, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the 
immediate consideration of H.R. 3086, which was received from the 
House. I ask unanimous consent that the bill be read a third time and 
passed, and the motion to reconsider be laid upon the table.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from North Dakota.
  Ms. HEITKAMP. Reserving the right to object, I want to first make a 
couple

[[Page 13814]]

of points, which as we talk about this, I think it is clear to identify 
who is the taxing authority. The distinguished and very learned 
constitutional scholar from the State of Texas knows well that the 
imposition does not come from this body. The imposition comes from 
States and local governments which have 10th Amendment sovereign 
rights. They have the ability to finance their own government. They 
have the ability to make those decisions. Congress has the right to 
make decisions on their ability, based on a concept that Congress 
ultimately has the obligation to control and to deal with interstate 
commerce. Only in the rarest of circumstances when interstate commerce 
is critically involved has Congress stepped up. It is very rare that 
this body, or that any previous Congress, has actually dictated the 
constraints of that sovereign right of States and local governments 
under the 10th Amendment to impose their own taxes.
  I can tell you the RRRR Act is probably one of the most glaring 
examples. During a time in the 1970s when the railroads were struggling 
and different kinds of transportation organizations were struggling, we 
saw this body step up with a unified approach to improving the 
railroads. Guess what. The railroads got better. The States know now 
what the constraints are, established by this body, very limited on 
their ability to do centralized assessments on the railroads.
  We saw it in something called Public Law 86-272, regarding income 
taxes--a very narrow exemption to those sovereign rights. Yes, the 
Internet Tax Freedom Act is an exercise of this body's commerce clause 
responsibility to take a look at what is in the best interests of 
moving forward. But let's not forget, what we are doing is a very 
interesting balance responsibility to improve interstate commerce.
  So when my distinguished colleague suggests that this body is 
imposing any tax, that clearly is a misstatement of the facts today. 
There is no locality, there is no organization, State organization or 
State body that is required to impose any tax on the Internet or 
required to impose any tax on sales tax. So, yes, I believe we too need 
to address the Internet tax moratorium which expires on November 1. But 
we also need to have a discussion in this context of commerce clause 
responsibility, to give the States the right to decide whether they 
are, in fact, going to collect State and local taxes and use taxes.
  I would remind the Senator, the collection responsibility is on the 
use tax for remote sales. Congress's responsibility and failure to meet 
that responsibility, of creating an opportunity to level the playing 
field for Main Street businesses--what do I say? I tell you if you are 
selling a widget in North Dakota and you have bricks and mortar and you 
participate in the society, you provide dollars for the schools, you 
provide scholarship dollars, you collect a sales tax. But if you are a 
remote seller, taking advantage of the same marketplace and competing 
directly against that Main Street business, you no longer have that 
responsibility.
  So to suggest that this body, by doing any of this, would be imposing 
any taxes on mom and pop ignores the fact that the imposition of this 
tax comes from State and local governments, which all too often my 
friends on the other side of the aisle say: Closer to the people, the 
more responsive those State governments are. I would suggest that in 
the great State of Texas, the current Governor, who is a Republican, 
certainly has the ability to decide tax policy. The legislatures are 
Republican and certainly can decide if they want to do any imposition 
of taxes.
  So with all of that in mind, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Oregon.


                   Unanimous Consent Request--S. 2735

  Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, I am going to be brief, having spoken on 
this already once today. I simply want to highlight my sense of where 
all of this is. Back in 1998, along with Congressman Chris Cox, a 
Republican Congressman from California, one of the most market-oriented 
individuals I have ever seen in public service, he and I came together 
to write the original Internet Tax Freedom Act. The reason we did is we 
were concerned about discrimination, which looked as though it could do 
enormous damage to innovation and the future of the Internet. For 
example, we saw early on that if someone bought the newspaper in some 
jurisdiction online, they would pay a hefty tax. But if they bought the 
snail-mail edition, they would pay no tax.
  So Congressman Cox and I, on a bipartisan basis, came together and 
said: ``We do not want to see that kind of discrimination against the 
future. We do not want to see that kind of discrimination against 
innovation and technology.'' So that is what the Internet Tax Freedom 
Act was all about in 1998. The subsequent reauthorizations were all 
about trying to build on that enormous success.
  Congressman Cox and I thought the Internet tax freedom bill would be 
a success back in 1998. It has far exceeded expectations in terms of 
promoting innovation and small business and many of the concerns that 
all three colleagues have touched on.
  So then to fast forward to today, I am the author of the legislation, 
with our colleague from South Dakota, Senator Thune, of the permanent 
Internet tax freedom extension. I will just say to colleagues: I would 
like nothing more--nothing more--than to be able to stand here today to 
see this enormously valuable piece of legislation made permanent now.
  The reality, however, is--and we have seen it and heard about it--
there are objections on both sides at this point to seeing the bill I 
wrote with Senator Thune--and Senator Cruz correctly notes that more 
than half of the Senate has co-sponsored--we have objections to seeing 
that bill move today. So the best thing that can be done now, for the 
hundreds of millions of American Internet users and the economy for 
which the Internet is a lifeline, is to extend the current ban until it 
is possible to lock in a path to pass a permanent extension.
  This is not a political issue. That point has been made. There are a 
number of Democrats and Republicans who join myself and Senator Thune 
in supporting the permanent moratorium. There are a number of 
Republicans and Democrats opposing the extension of that moratorium, 
reluctantly. We will have that debate. They seem to think it is okay to 
impose discriminatory taxes on the Internet.
  So it seems to me that no one who supports keeping the moratorium in 
place ought to object to a short-term extension now. Doing so only 
makes it more likely that Internet access and services would be subject 
to discriminatory taxation.
  Let me now, in the interest of time, simply ask unanimous consent the 
Senate proceed to the consideration of S. 2735, a 2-month extension of 
the Internet Tax Freedom Act, to December 31, 2014, the text of which 
is at the desk; that the bill be read three times and passed, and the 
motion to reconsider be laid upon the table with no intervening action 
or debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Ms. AYOTTE. Madam President, reserving the right to object. First of 
all, let me say to my colleague from Oregon, I share what you have 
described and the work that you did in bringing forth the Internet Tax 
Freedom Act. The success we have seen from keeping the Internet free 
from discriminatory taxes has been astounding. So I commend the Senator 
for that.
  I am a proud cosponsor of your permanent act that you have with the 
Senator from South Dakota. I appreciate that you recognize how 
important it is that we keep this freedom for our Internet that has 
been so productive for the American people and, frankly, giving people 
from all walks of life access to this great tool on the Internet. So I 
thank my colleague from Oregon for that.
  Unfortunately, I object. I want to note today that I am reserving my 
right to object because to extend this only to December 31 is to invite 
uncertainty to the American people.
  I think the American people have had enough of these dramatic New 
Year's

[[Page 13815]]

Eve moments in this body where they are wondering: Are we going to act 
upon important things, like will we ensure that the Internet remains 
free from discriminatory taxes? I know my colleague from Oregon shares 
the same goals.
  But to put this to December 31, the lameduck of this body, at a 
moment where we can all be sitting here on New Year's Eve and the 
American people again can be looking at us saying: Why do you all leave 
this to the very last minute on something that has 52 cosponsors and is 
the right thing to do for the American people? We should give them 
certainty now by extending this law permanently.
  I also note that if this is going to be extended into the lameduck 
session, I am very worried about the shenanigans that are going to 
happen. The shenanigans are on an issue that the Senator from Oregon 
and I are quite passionate about, and that is the so-called Marketplace 
Fairness Act my colleague from North Dakota just referenced, which, 
instead of the Marketplace Fairness Act, I like to call the Internet 
Sales Tax Selection Act.
  My colleague from North Dakota mentioned that this is about the State 
and local selecting taxes. I respect that State and localities should 
be able to collect taxes. But for States such as Oregon and New 
Hampshire which don't have a sales tax, why should our businesses or 
why should any Internet business in this country take on the 
responsibility which has traditionally been the responsibility of State 
and local governments to collect taxes?
  Under the so-called Market Fairness Act, what would happen is 
Internet businesses across this country--including in States such as 
Oregon and New Hampshire--would become the sales tax collectors for 
almost 10,000 tax jurisdictions in this country, which is a 
bureaucratic nightmare for so many thriving Internet businesses. It is 
an anathema to States such as ours--Oregon and New Hampshire--which 
have chosen not to have a sales tax.
  Most importantly, to subject our great online businesses to the 
potential that they could be subject to an audit in almost 10,000 
taxing jurisdictions to me is the opposite of what I know my colleague 
from Oregon is trying to accomplish with all the work he has done in 
this body, not only on the Wyden-Thune Internet Tax Freedom Forever 
Act--which I fully support--but all the other work he has done to make 
sure the Internet remains free and prosperous in this country for the 
benefit of all the American people.
  So I object to what my colleague from Oregon has offered. I think a 
short-term fix is no fix at all. In fact, it leaves the American people 
again uncertain that we will protect their rights against 
discriminatory taxes that can be imposed on them over the Internet, and 
it also invites shenanigans with the so-called Marketplace Fairness Act 
that can get attached.
  I know some of my colleagues have talked about the potential of 
attaching this unfair act, which I would like to call the Internet 
Sales Tax Collection Act, which makes our online businesses across this 
country the sales tax collectors for almost 10,000 tax jurisdictions in 
this Nation.
  So, for those reasons, I object. I would like to see what my 
colleague from Oregon has put forth--which is excellent legislation, 
and I thank him for that--which is permanent tax freedom for the 
Internet.
  With that, I believe the Senator from Texas would also like to be 
heard on this issue.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from Texas.
  Mr. CRUZ. Madam President, I wish to briefly explain to people 
watching the back-and-forth that just occurred what is going on here, 
because it is easy to not understand everything that is happening. 
There are three things going on here:
  No. 1, what we are unfortunately seeing is the Senate holding one 
bill hostage in order to try to force through another unpopular bill.
  There are two bills concerning the Internet. The first is the 
Internet Tax Freedom Act. That has been in place for over a decade. It 
has had bipartisan support. It has been championed by the Senator from 
Oregon who has been an outspoken and passionate advocate of making sure 
that when you and I go and sign up for the Internet, we don't face 
taxes for getting Internet service, and it has worked very well. That 
law has always been an area of bipartisan agreement.
  But there is a second law that has been proposed in this body but not 
passed. The second law is the Internet sales tax, what its proponents 
call the Marketplace Fairness Act. The Internet sales tax is not 
focused on taxing someone just for signing up to the Internet. Rather, 
the people being punished by the Internet sales tax are all the small 
businesses trying to sell their wares online, and there are a number of 
Senators who very much want to impose taxes on those small businesses 
in 9,600 jurisdictions nationwide.
  What is happening here, right now, is even though no one has serious 
objection to the Internet Tax Freedom Act, we are, unfortunately, 
seeing our colleagues from the Democratic side of the aisle hold that 
bill hostage in an effort to try to force through the Internet sales 
tax.
  I would note the reason my friend from New Hampshire had no choice 
but to object to the 2-month proposal is the 2-month time period was 
not picked out of a hat. Two months means the Internet Tax Freedom Act 
would expire during a lameduck session. And why is that? Because in a 
lameduck session there are a bunch of Members who have been defeated, 
who aren't going to face voters ever again. A lameduck session is the 
session most likely to raise taxes.
  So why is it there is an effort to extend this just 2 months? So when 
the Internet Tax Freedom Act expires in the lameduck, the Members of 
this body who lost their election and are immune from democratic 
accountability will all come together and say: OK, now let's pass the 
Internet sales tax. We shouldn't be holding the Internet hostage to the 
rapacious desire of tax collectors.
  A second point I want to make about what is going on here--this is 
about discriminatory taxes, not about federalism. My friend, the 
Senator from North Dakota, was a learned attorney general who talked 
about the 10th Amendment and federalism. I welcome seeing friends of 
mine on the Democratic side of the aisle embrace the 10th Amendment. I 
look forward and hope aspirationally that friends on the Democratic 
side of the aisle will embrace the 10th Amendment on other issues.
  I would note, however, that the constitutional history we were told 
was a little bit off, because if we look at the history of our country, 
originally we had the Articles of Confederation. The Articles of 
Confederation allowed States to enact discriminatory taxes against each 
other, and it led to chaos. It didn't work. One of the reasons our 
Constitution was adopted was to prevent discriminatory taxes, one State 
picking on another State.
  So when Congress was given the authority to regulate interstate 
commerce, it is precisely to prevent a little mom and pop selling 
online from being forced by 9,600 jurisdictions nationwide to collect 
all of those taxes. If someone is living and working in the State of 
Texas, they shouldn't have to collect taxes for New York or 
California--for politicians they don't get to vote for. For politicians 
they don't get any input on, they shouldn't be forced to collect their 
taxes.
  Indeed, for the approach of Members of this body who want to pass the 
Internet sales tax, recall President Reagan's famous admonition:

       Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a 
     few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, 
     regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.

  Why don't we stop it at the outset? The Internet is moving. It is 
generating entrepreneurial steam throughout this country. We haven't 
been taxing it. Let's not start now.
  The third and final point I will make about what this exchange is 
about is, more than anything, this exchange is about crony capitalism.

[[Page 13816]]

  I would note the Presiding Officer today has been quite passionate 
discussing the corruption in Washington that favors big business. What 
we just saw on this Senate floor illustrates that as powerfully as 
anything that has happened this year. Because what is the Internet 
sales tax all about? It is about a coalition of big businesses coming 
together, both big bricks-and-mortar retailers and big online retailers 
coming to their elected officials, saying: You know what. We don't like 
competition. These little guys, these little upstarts, these single 
moms who start businesses and compete with us, we don't like that. So 
let's go to our friends in Washington--our friends, mind you, whom we 
hold campaign fundraisers for, whose campaigns we contribute to--and 
let's get the Congress to come together and hammer every small online 
business we can.
  That is what we are seeing. This is crony capitalism. This is a law 
designed to benefit big companies and hurt small startups.
  The beauty of our country is that anybody can come to this country 
with nothing but a hope and a dream and a vision and achieve anything. 
It is because the entrepreneurial vibrancy of this country gives the 
little guy a chance. Yet I am sorry to say Washington more and more 
behaves as though it is for sale to the highest bidder.
  Right now, today, the top 1 percent in our country earns a higher 
share of our income than any year since 1928. We ought to come together 
in a bipartisan way and say: Stop being the handmaidens of big 
business. Stop using government to make it harder for the little guy, 
for young people, for single moms, for Hispanic and African-American 
entrepreneurs. Stop making it harder for them to achieve the American 
dream. Stop pulling up the ladder so the big companies can say: We have 
got ours; nobody else gets theirs.
  When big business comes to Washington and says: We want government's 
help stifling small business, both parties should stand together and 
say: Sorry. That is not what the Congress is for. We work for the 
American people. But, I am sorry to say, what we just saw was a 
powerful demonstration that this Senate right now is more interested in 
preserving crony capitalism than it is in protecting mom-and-pops, in 
protecting opportunity, in protecting Internet tax freedom.
  But the great thing about our system is at the end of the day, the 
American people don't work for the 100 Members of this body. It is the 
other way around: All 100 of us work for the American people. And I 
will tell you, the American people are getting fed up. They are getting 
fed up with Members of both parties who spend more time giving in to 
the corruption of Washington and entrenching power than they do 
removing barriers to people achieving the American dream.
  I am hopeful and confident that the voters are waking up, are 
standing up, and will hold every one of us accountable. Democrats and 
Republicans, every one of us, will be held accountable: Have you fought 
to make it easier to achieve the American dream or have you simply 
preserved the corrupt crony capitalism of Washington?
  I hope we can together aspire to our better angels. I hope we can 
come together and keep and preserve in a bipartisan manner Internet tax 
freedom.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, to briefly respond to the Senator from 
Texas.
  Mr. CORNYN. If the Senator would yield for a unanimous consent 
request.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
  Mr. CORNYN. I ask unanimous consent that following the remarks of the 
Senator from Oregon, the Senator from Kansas be recognized, following 
that I then be recognized, and then Senator Sanders from Vermont would 
be following me.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, reserving the right to object, just to be 
clear: Senator Cornyn would speak next, and then Senator Sanders would 
speak after him?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
  Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, the unanimous consent would be the 
Senator from Oregon, the Senator from Kansas, the Senator from Texas, 
and the Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. WYDEN. I withdraw my reservation.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, very briefly to describe where I think 
the Internet tax debate is, we have Republicans and Democrats objecting 
to what I happen to think is in the country's national interest, and 
that is a permanent ban on Internet tax discrimination. So we have 
Republicans and Democrats objecting to that.
  Now my colleague from Texas comes forward and says: OK, let's not do 
a 2-month extension because we don't want to consider this in the lame 
duck session. But, colleagues, if you don't do the 2-month extension, 
the Internet Tax Freedom Act will have expired and you are still in the 
lame duck session. And by the time you get to the lame duck, millions 
of Americans will be vulnerable to discriminatory Internet taxes.
  I am going to close this discussion by saying that in my view neither 
of the options is exactly ideal, because I think I made it very clear 
after 16 years that I would like to make permanent the ban against 
discriminatory taxes. Neither situation is ideal from my standpoint 
because Republicans and Democrats both object to doing that today. But 
what we know is that one option we have in front of us today is worse 
than the other, and the really bad option is to not do a short-term 
extension and leave millions of Americans vulnerable to discriminatory 
taxes.
  With that, Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kansas.
  Mr. MORAN. Thank you, Madam President.
  I wish to speak for a few moments this afternoon on the topic of 
veterans and veterans affairs, knowing, or at least expecting a vote 
later today on a piece of legislation that has now been compromised 
between the House and Senate versions of the bill, and something that I 
look forward to supporting.


                       Honoring Herb Schwartzkopf

  First of all, though, I wish to take a moment to honor a Kansas 
veteran, a veteran who dedicated much of his life to serving our 
country, whether that was on active duty in the Navy or advocating on 
behalf of other veterans, Mr. Herb Schwartzkopf from Ransom, KS.
  Mr. Schwartzkopf's many selfless acts began when he served in the 
Navy in Vietnam. After separating from the service, he returned to 
Kansas and joined the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the VFW, which he has 
been a member of now for more than 35 years. He is considered a life 
member of the VFW.
  Last year the Hutchinson News asked Herb about his life and 
dedication to serving his fellow veterans. His response was, ``I will 
talk about the `V,' but I am not going to talk about me.'' The V is 
Herb's beloved VFW Post, because he is a humble man who has 
accomplished much and his priorities in life have been taking care of 
his country and taking care of the veterans who have served his 
country.
  The countless contributions Herb Schwartzkopf has made over 35 years 
of advocacy for veterans has earned him the highest honor bestowed by 
the VFW, the All-American Commander of Post 7972 in Ransom, KS. Herb's 
VFW post serves as a meeting place and a community service hub for the 
Lions Club meetings and Thanksgiving feasts for the 296 residents of 
his hometown. It is also a place for raising funds for local cancer 
patients and victims, helping fund annual Honor Flights to come see the 
World War II Memorial by Kansas veterans. The 160 members of Post 7972 
complete more than 250 service projects and volunteer more than 4,000 
hours a year.

[[Page 13817]]

  His leadership at the VFW post has deservedly won the National 
Community Service Post of the Year award five times, including 3 years 
in a row for 2009, 2010, and 2011.
  The Ransom VFW's success is a result of true selflessness. As Herb 
put it: ``If something comes up and somebody needs help, we just try to 
rise to the occasion.'' It seems only fitting that he has earned this 
prestigious award as All-American Post Commander.
  I pay tribute to him, to his post, his service to our country, and 
his service to other Kansans, and thank him for that care and concern 
for other veterans across the country. So I say thank you for your 
selfless dedication. On behalf of all Kansans, we wish you well and we 
are fortunate to have you as a citizen of our State and a citizen of 
our Nation.


                        Toxic Exposure Research

  I also want to speak about legislation today that has been introduced 
by Senator Blumenthal and me. It is an issue that Senator Blumenthal 
brought to my attention and today we have introduced the Toxic Exposure 
Research Act of 2014.
  We unfortunately live in a nation where men and women volunteer their 
services to sacrifice and support us to have the strongest, freest, 
greatest Nation in the world. When servicemembers raise their right 
hand and take the oath of enlistment or commissioning, they commit 
their lives to support and defend the Constitution of the United States 
and to protect the freedoms we hold dear.
  Standing by their side through combat tours and multiple duty 
stations around the world is their family. We should and we must 
acknowledge that their family members are being called to sacrifice for 
our Nation as well.
  The Toxic Exposure Research Act is about addressing the wounds of war 
that might impact a servicemember's family--wounds that may not be 
evident for decades later when it is passed on to the next person of 
their family or the next generation. This legislation would provide for 
the research on health conditions of dependents of veterans who were 
exposed to toxins during their service to our Nation such as Agent 
Orange in Vietnam, gulf war neurotoxins, burn pits in Iraq, or other 
chemicals from recent conflicts overseas.
  I am not a veteran, but my life has been shaped by the fact that the 
Vietnam war took place during my high school years. Many of my 
conversations in high school were spent talking to those who were a few 
years older than I who were volunteering or being drafted, and for 
those who returned home to my hometown after their service in Vietnam.
  During Vietnam, many of our veterans were exposed to Agent Orange and 
years later many veterans and their families are still struggling with 
the side effects of that exposure. Agent Orange specifically has been 
shown to cause birth defects in children of military members who came 
in contact with the toxin during the Vietnam war. There are other 
poisons from wars since Vietnam that have led to life-altering health 
problems and painful tragedies among veterans and their families.
  A story of Herb Worthington and his daughter Karen is compelling. Mr. 
Worthington was drafted to serve in Vietnam and was exposed to Agent 
Orange. Years after his service came to an end he suffered from many 
conditions as a proven result of his exposure to Agent Orange. His 
daughter has battled MS for more than 19 years and has been treated for 
other conditions such as melanoma and an extremely painful nerve 
condition. Her life has been handicapped by health problems and various 
kinds of illnesses which must be studied in connection with the 
exposure of her father and what he experienced with Agent Orange.
  Stories like Mr. Worthington's and his daughter Karen's have been 
shared all across the country in townhall meetings. I have heard them 
in stories at home in Kansas and they have been collected by the 
Vietnam Veterans of America. This is an issue that is important to all 
veterans. It is important to all Americans that we live up to our 
commitment to those who serve, and it is time we take necessary steps 
to help and protect their families now and for generations to come. 
Many people we will never know may be affected by the consequences of 
their mother, father, grandmother, or grandfather's service to their 
country. Clear evidence of unsettling conditions and those personal 
stories warrant the need to collect data to research and study the 
consequences of these toxins.
  I invite my colleagues to learn more about these conditions and the 
impact they are having on family members of veterans by checking out a 
social media page, Faces of Agent Orange, through the Vietnam Veterans 
Association, VVA. The fact is many symptoms from toxic exposure are 
misdiagnosed in descendants of veterans because of lack of 
understanding and lack of scientific proof.
  I would ask my colleagues to join us in giving the authority to the 
Secretary--the new Secretary we confirmed earlier this week--a tool he 
needs so he can designate a VA medical center as a national center for 
research on the diagnosis and treatment of health conditions of 
descendants of individuals or soldiers exposed to toxic substances 
during their service to our country, during their time as military 
members.
  This legislation would establish an advisory board of experts to 
advise the national center and the VA Secretary with determining the 
health conditions studied and those that are a result of toxic 
exposure.
  The Department of Defense has a role to play here in this research, 
sharing incidents of military members who were exposed to substances, 
to enhance the studies and outcomes conducted by the Department of 
Veterans Affairs. Ultimately our hope is this medical research would 
determine those conditions that are the result of debilitating toxins 
and lead to appropriate support and benefits, cures and treatments for 
family members.
  Military families support our Nation in their love and commitment to 
those who served in the Armed Forces, and they should not inherit the 
painful residual wounds of war that put their lives at risk long after 
the military operation is over. Toxic exposure research is a necessary 
step toward making certain our military men and women and their 
descendants will be properly cared for. It is also a step toward making 
certain that those toxins are not used in a way that causes this to be 
repeated again in any future war.
  We must keep our promises to our veterans and to their families who 
have made the greatest sacrifice for the sake of our country, our 
security, our freedom, and our country's future.
  Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.


                             Border Crisis

  Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, later on today I expect we would be 
voting on the emergency supplemental appropriation that the President 
had requested to deal with the humanitarian crisis on the Texas border. 
Over the past few weeks I have spoken about this and made several trips 
down to the valley. I will be leaving tonight along with colleagues. 
There is a bipartisan congressional delegation going down again to the 
valley and to Lackland Air Force Base where about 1200 children are 
currently being housed by the Department of Health and Human Services 
pending their placement with their relatives in the country.
  As part of this discussion we have been having in the search for 
solutions to this unexpected flood of humanity in the form of 
unaccompanied children coming across the southwestern border, many of 
us are trying to figure out exactly what the cause of this flood is. In 
fact, I think it is probably more than one cause. I think perhaps it is 
the President's statements that he is going to defer action or refuse 
to enforce our current immigration laws against a certain class of 
immigrants that is known as the President's deferred executive action 
order of 2012.
  But there is also another cause that has been recognized on a 
bipartisan basis, and this is a 2008 human trafficking law that passed 
essentially unanimously in 2008, because we were

[[Page 13818]]

focused on one problem; that is, human trafficking, but the unexpected 
consequences or unintended consequences of that created a business 
model that is being exploited by the transnational criminal 
organizations, or cartels, as they traffic in human beings coming from 
Central America through Mexico up to the Texas border.
  Together with my colleague in the House, Henry Cuellar, a Democrat, 
we have introduced a bipartisan, bicameral reform, something we call 
the HUMANE Act, and it has been cosponsored by people who have 
supported the so-called Gang of 8 bill in the Senate and people who 
opposed the Gang of 8 bill.
  I raise that point to note that this isn't about comprehensive 
immigration reform. We have a lot of work to be done. But this is 
actually intended to solve this immediate problem right in front of our 
eyes and to stop this hemorrhaging on our southwestern border. My hope 
is once we address that problem, we can come together in a bipartisan 
way and address the larger defects in our immigration system, of which 
there are many. This is, simply put, an attempt to tackle a national 
emergency.
  Let me briefly recapitulate what I am talking about. Since October of 
last year 57,000 unaccompanied children have been detained on the 
southwestern border. Under current law--this 2008 law I mentioned--
these children are processed by the Border Patrol and they are placed 
with the Department of Health and Human Services, as it turns out an 
average of 35 days, and then placed with a family member in the United 
States or, if not a family member, some sponsor.
  Part of the problem is that they are given a notice to appear at a 
future court hearing and very few of them appear. Thus, they are 
successful in making their way from Honduras, El Salvador, or Guatemala 
up through Mexico into the United States, and end up successfully 
immigrating to the United States illegally, outside of our broken 
immigration system.
  What we need to do in order to fix that gap in the law, that loophole 
which was unintended by those of us who voted to pass the 2008 law, is 
to require that these children be held in protective custody and given 
a speedy hearing in front of an immigration judge for those who want to 
make the claim for asylum or some other relief. But the truth is the 
vast majority of these children, like the adults, will not have a claim 
to stay under existing law and our bill doesn't change that existing 
law. But for those who do, they have a speedy opportunity to appear in 
front of a judge and make that claim. Those who do not have a valid 
claim will simply be returned to their home country, to their family.
  This morning I was invited, along with Members of the House and the 
Senate, to visit with the President about national security matters. He 
talked about Ukraine, he talked about Syria, he talked about Gaza, and 
all of the hot spots around the world. I used the opportunity to ask 
the President what he proposed that we do when this emergency 
supplemental bill goes down this afternoon.
  The reason this bill will fail is because the majority leader simply 
is asking us to appropriate money and do nothing to fix the problem we 
have attempted to address in the HUMANE Act with Congressman Cuellar 
that I mentioned a moment ago.
  In essence, the President asked for a blank check, when he himself 
acknowledged this morning in my presence and the presence of a 
bipartisan group of Senators and Congressmen that he knows we need to 
address this problem or it will just get worse if we don't address it.
  It is quite remarkable to me that the President of the United States 
acknowledges we have a problem we need to address. When the Secretary 
of Homeland Security, who is trying to use the tools available to him 
to solve this crisis but knows he needs more tools and more authority, 
at the same time the President makes that acknowledgment, and at the 
same time his Secretary of Homeland Security identifies the need for 
additional authority in order to address the problem, the President has 
reported he wants to actually expand this deferred action Executive 
order he issued in 2012 and say to the people who are coming to our 
country outside of our immigration laws: It is OK. You can stay here. 
There are no consequences associated with that.
  The problem with that is the message that is being sent to the 
cartels who traffic in human beings and make a lot of money off of it--
like I said a moment ago, this is part of their business model--by 
exploiting this loophole in the law.
  What sort of message does this send to the families who would send 
their children on this horrific journey from Central America through 
Mexico on the back of a train called The Beast? They are willing to 
send their children on this journey even though they could be injured, 
sexually assaulted, kidnapped or held for ransom. We don't know how 
many of them start the journey but don't make it because of the 
horrific conditions by the criminal organizations, not to mention the 
exposure to the hot weather and difficult environmental circumstances.
  By failing to address the root cause of the problem, what we are 
saying is: That is OK. Keep coming. Indeed, that is why it is projected 
that of the 57,000 unaccompanied children who have made it here so far 
and have been detained--by the way, they are not trying to evade 
detection by Border Patrol. They are turning themselves in because they 
realize they will be processed and placed with Health and Human 
Services, and essentially, by and large, they will be able to stay. 
That is what we need to address.
  Unfortunately, the House tried to work together today to pass a bill 
that would, I believe, have provided more money, as the President 
requested--not as much as he requested, but an emergency appropriation, 
together with the reforms to that 2008 law which would have addressed 
this problem.
  Unfortunately, because the House of Representatives could not get any 
Democratic support, that bill failed and so the Speaker of the House 
pulled the bill from the floor. As a result, they will not be able to 
pass any legislation to send over to the Senate. That should not cause 
any of our colleagues here in the Senate much joy because the fact of 
the matter is the House has its independent duty to act and we have our 
own duty to act, and we can and should do that this afternoon.
  We should do what the House attempted to do, which is to pass a 
slimmed-down appropriations bill on an emergency basis to help surge 
resources to the border but at the same time find a way to come 
together and plug the hole in this 2008 law, which is necessary to stop 
the problem--at least on this surgical basis.
  What is so confusing is to listen to the President talk in his 
conference room at the White House about this and acknowledge the 
nature of the problem, and then to see that the White House threatened 
to veto the legislation that the House was considering. There are a lot 
of mixed messages, to say the least, with regard to the President's 
commitment to actually enforce the law. We know that in too many 
instances he has simply refused to enforce the law, and our immigration 
law is just one of those. But to hear such mixed messages out of the 
White House and the administration that yes, we need to act--we should 
not just write a blank check. We ought to do the policy reforms with it 
that would solve the problem.
  I will just add that in talking to Secretary Johnson--I don't think I 
am disclosing any confidence he himself wouldn't repeat--there is 
actually an earlier experience we had in 2005 and 2006 which I think is 
very instructive and which we have discussed.
  Secretary Chertoff was Secretary of Homeland Security when President 
Bush was in the White House and we had a surge of people coming from 
countries other than Mexico, so-called OTMs--in this case Brazilians. 
In 2005, we saw a surge of 30,000 Brazilian immigrants at the 
southwestern border. Upon investigation, they realized the reason we 
saw a surge in these numbers was because of a policy known as catch and 
release--colloquially.

[[Page 13819]]

  In other words, people came to the country, were caught, given notice 
to appear at a future court hearing, and they simply disappeared and 
melted into the great American landscape, knowing they would 
successfully immigrate illegally into the United States.
  It is the same policy of catch and release that is causing this surge 
of unaccompanied minors, not to mention single adults with young 
children. We don't have adequate detention facilities for them, so they 
are released, given a bus ticket, and told to come back for their court 
hearing a year or more later. And they simply never show up.
  We have all been noticing with great concern this humanitarian crisis 
at the border and the conflicting and contradictory messages and 
actions coming out of Washington, DC. So it was not really all that 
surprising to me to see a new poll that was reported this morning where 
68 percent of the respondents disapproved of the President's handling 
of the immigration issue--68 percent. According to the Washington Post 
this morning, no other single issue trumps immigration in terms of 
Presidential disapproval. That is a shocking number.

       Unfortunately, when I asked the President today: What 
     happens, Mr. President, when we leave for the August recess 
     and nothing happens to address this problem? He said: Well, 
     one thing we are going to have to do is reprogram money from 
     other programs and use that money to address this hole and 
     this surge needed at the southwestern border.

  I was disappointed the President didn't say what I was hoping he 
would say, and that is: I am going to call majority leader Harry Reid, 
and I am going to tell him he needs to allow a vote on some of the 
amendments we are going to offer, such as the HUMANE Act, on this 
emergency supplemental, and give the Senate an opportunity to vote for 
a solution and not just another blank check. Unfortunately, I didn't 
hear that commitment from the President.
  As a result, this afternoon we are going to leave this city and go 
back home without doing anything to address what the President himself 
has called a humanitarian crisis. The problem is just going to get 
worse. As long as the magnet exists, as long as this business model 
that the cartels have figured out continues to be lucrative and they 
continue to make money exploiting it and we don't do anything to fix 
it, the numbers will get worse and worse. And as we see children being 
placed in literally warehouse-type settings around the country, we are 
going to continue to see more and more backlash from the American 
people as they realize the Federal Government is failing in its most 
basic function, which is to secure our border and enforce our laws.
  Unfortunately, this is what Presidential abdication of duty looks 
like. The President identified a national emergency, but has done 
virtually nothing to address it. Indeed, he said: We have a problem, 
and we need to fix it. He then threatened to veto the very legislation 
the House proposed would fix it.
  This is what happens when a President openly and proudly is 
contemptuous of his obligation to faithfully enforce the law of the 
land by not only issuing an Executive order in 2012 that is beyond his 
legal authority to do but also by saying that because Congress has not 
done what I want them to do as far as reforming our immigration laws, I 
am going to further expand my Executive order and refuse to enforce the 
law with regard to more and more people. That is not a secret. It is 
well reported in the newspapers and on television, and it is not lost 
on the people who make money exploiting this system nor the people who 
want to come to the United States outside of our immigration laws.
  Sadly, I can only conclude that although the President plainly knows 
what we need to do, as do his cabinet members, and although prominent 
Democrats have plainly identified what we need to do to fix the 
problem, when he doesn't demand that the majority leader allow a vote 
and a solution to that problem, I can only conclude that he is 
listening to his political advisers and not making the best judgment 
that is in the best interest of the American people. I can't explain it 
any other way.
  So on in one last attempt this afternoon to address this crisis, I, 
along with several of my colleagues, am introducing an alternative to 
this blank check that the President has requested and Majority Leader 
Reid will set for a vote. It will include many of the reforms I 
mentioned earlier in the HUMANE Act, but specifically our legislation 
would treat all unaccompanied minors the same under the law. It would 
correct that loophole in the 2008 law that treats unaccompanied minors 
from Mexico differently from unaccompanied children from noncontiguous 
countries. It would give Federal, State, and local authorities the 
resources they need in order to manage the crisis. It would improve our 
detention capacity so we would end this catch and release which is 
being exploited, and it would ensure safe repatriation by filing for 
protective custody for all those children who don't qualify for an 
immigration benefit under current law.
  Our bill would prevent the Obama administration also from 
unilaterally creating yet another deferred action program that would 
further add gasoline to this fire and cause these numbers to continue 
to grow and the humanitarian crisis to expand. In other words, our bill 
would help resolve the current crisis and would help prevent a similar 
crisis from occurring in the future.
  Under the Senate procedures, the only person who can make the 
decision whether the Senate will have an opportunity to vote on such a 
reform is the majority leader, and he has already announced that he 
intends not to allow us to offer that reform. So I expect we will end 
up leaving here today having done nothing, in spite of the fact there 
is bipartisan and bicameral recognition that we are experiencing a 
crisis and the President and his own cabinet have identified the causes 
but refuse to do anything about them. To me that is the very definition 
of dysfunction and the very reason that the American people are 
absolutely disgusted with the refusal of Congress and the executive 
branch to do what we know needs to be done--and it is a tragedy.
  I hope the majority leader will reconsider and give us a chance to 
vote on this reform to help solve the problem, and then we can move on 
and address other important problems that face our country.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Markey). The Senator from Vermont.


                          VA Conference Report

  Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, I rise today in strong support of the VA 
conference committee report, which I expect and hope will be on the 
floor here in a couple of hours. That conference committee report was 
passed yesterday by the House with an overwhelming vote of 420 to 5, 
and I hope very much our vote here in the Senate will be as strong as 
the vote in the House.
  The conference committee legislation that we will be voting on, 
frankly, is certainly not the legislation I would have written. I think 
it is fair to say it is not the legislation that the chairman of the 
House Veterans' Affairs Committee, Jeff Miller, would have written; it 
is, in fact, a compromise, but it is a compromise I can strongly 
support, and I hope all of my Senate colleagues will support it as 
well.
  This bill does a number of very important things to address the 
problems facing the veterans of our country. Right now veterans in many 
parts of this country are on very long waiting lists before they get VA 
health care. I think in the last month or so the VA has made a 
concerted effort to reach out to those veterans and to get them care 
when necessary in the private sector, and I think Acting Secretary 
Sloan Gibson did a good job in jump-starting that process and saying to 
veterans we are going to do everything we can to get them quality care 
in a timely manner. Obviously, this is an expensive proposition, but it 
is one we have to address.
  This legislation we will be voting on in a few hours provides $10 
billion to make sure every eligible veteran in this country will get 
timely health care, quality health care, and they will do that through 
the private sector,

[[Page 13820]]

through community health centers, through Department of Defense 
facilities, and Indian Health Service Clinics when those facilities 
work for veterans. If there is a community health center in a 
community, the veteran can go in there and the VA will pay that bill. 
That is the effort we are making to significantly reduce these long 
waiting lines.
  This bill also provides a remedy for a condition many of us consider 
to be terribly important, and that is it gets to the root of why it is 
that we have long waiting periods in many VA facilities around the 
country. The reality is that in the last 4 or 5 years we have seen, as 
a result of the wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan, some 2 million more 
veterans coming into the VA, a net increase of about 1.5 million 
patients. That is a lot of people. There is not the slightest doubt in 
my mind or in the mind of the VA that if we are going to do justice to 
our veterans, we are going to need more doctors, more mental health 
counselors, more nurses, more medical personnel in general, so that 
when a veteran walks into a VA facility, that veteran will get quality 
care in a timely manner.
  I have heard testimony in the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, 
which was very clear, and what virtually every major veterans 
organization has said is that when veterans get into the system, the 
quality of care they receive is good. It is good. That is not just what 
veterans are saying and what veterans organizations are saying; that is 
what a number of independent surveys and studies show us. The problem 
is access, and if we are going to on a long-term basis address that 
access problem, it is important to make sure we have the doctors, the 
nurses, and the medical personnel we should have. This bill provides $5 
billion to make sure we get that personnel.
  In addition to that, there are many facilities all over the country 
where there are very serious space problems. There are not the 
examination rooms doctors need in order to work efficiently, and this 
legislation addresses that with a $5 billion appropriation.
  In addition, there has been legislation passed in the House 
overwhelmingly that says, quite correctly, we need to fund 27 major 
medical facilities all over this country in 18 States and in Puerto 
Rico, and this legislation does that as well.
  In addition, what this legislation says--and this is mostly 
applicable to our rural States--is that if someone is a veteran living 
hundreds of miles away from a VA facility, when they are sick in the 
middle of winter or in the middle of summer, they are not going to have 
to travel hundreds of miles to get their physical therapy or to get the 
health care they need. If a veteran is living 40 miles away from a VA 
facility, they will be able to get their care in their community, again 
through a private doctor, through a community health center, through an 
Indian Health Service facility, through a Department of Defense 
facility.
  This is a big step forward for many veterans in rural communities who 
will now be able to get care in the area they live rather than having 
to travel long distances to get health care.
  This legislation also addresses some other very important issues that 
have not gotten a whole lot of attention but they are important, and I 
will mention what they are. All of us know that one of the outrages we 
have seen in recent years within the military is the very high level of 
sexual assault against women and against men as well. This legislation 
provides funding for the VA to increase their capability so women and 
men who are sexually assaulted will be able to come into the VA and get 
the care they need to address the problems associated with that 
assault, and I think that is a very important step forward.
  This legislation also takes action we should have taken some years 
ago. The post-9/11 GI bill has been enormously successful in providing 
educational opportunities for the men and women who have served in Iraq 
and Afghanistan and people who have served since 9/11. There was a gap 
in that legislation, and that gap was that a spouse of someone who died 
in Iraq or in Afghanistan was not eligible for all of the educational 
benefits of that post-9/11 GI bill. This legislation remedies that 
omission. It expands the John David Fry Scholarship Program to include 
surviving spouses of members of the Armed Forces who died in the line 
of duty. That means many young women out there will now have the 
opportunity to get a college education who otherwise would not have, 
and I think we owe that to all of those people who have already 
suffered so much.
  This legislation also allows for veterans--all veterans eligible for 
the post-9/11 GI bill--to qualify for instate tuition under that 
legislation. This was part of a bill previously passed in the House, 
and we are going to pass it in the Senate.
  There is another provision in here which is very important. A program 
which provides housing for veterans with traumatic brain injury was 
about to expire. This legislation extends that program for a number of 
years, which will be a real relief for people who were worried they 
would be out on the street and not have adequate housing.
  It has been from day one--from my first day as chairman of the 
veterans committee--my belief that the cost of war in terms of what it 
does to the men and women who fight our battles is a lot greater than 
most Americans fully understand. We all mourn the 6,700-plus men and 
women who died in Iraq and in Afghanistan, but we should understand the 
cost of war is much greater than that tragedy. The cost of war is the 
men and women who came home without legs, came home without arms, 
without eyesight, loss of hearing; the cost of war is the 500,000 men 
and women who came home from Iraq and Afghanistan with the signature 
illnesses of this war, which are post-traumatic stress disorder and 
traumatic brain injury. Those are the signature injuries of this war, 
and we are talking about 500,000 men and women coming home with those 
very serious problems. In fact, today--just today--and every day close 
to 50,000 veterans are going to get outpatient mental health care in VA 
facilities all over this country--close to 50,000.
  It has also been my view that when we fully understand the costs of 
war and the needs of the veterans and their families, it is absolutely 
imperative that we do not make veterans into political pawns. We do not 
say, yes, we are going to fund veterans' needs, but we are going to cut 
Head Start, we are going to cut the National Institutes of Health or we 
are going to cut education. That is absolutely unfair to our veterans. 
A cost of war is the cost of planes and guns and tanks and aircraft 
carriers--those are a cost of war. An equally significant cost of war 
is the needs of men and women who fought our battles and who used those 
weapons. What this legislation says and what the House just passed by a 
420-to-5 vote is that taking care of veterans is in fact a cost of war.
  The CBO has come up with some recent estimates which lower the costs 
a little bit. But this bill will put close to--a little bit less than 
$17 billion into VA health care over the next several years. There is 
$5 billion in offsets from within the VA that I was comfortable with 
that will bring the total cost of this package down to somewhere around 
perhaps $11 billion. Is that a lot of money? It is a lot of money. But 
that is the cost of war, and that is what happens when millions of 
veterans come home and need the care they are entitled to receive.
  As I mentioned a moment ago, the House passed this legislation by an 
overwhelming vote of 420 to 5. I wish to thank Chairman Miller in the 
House for the work he has done in getting that result. My understanding 
is that in a few hours we will be voting on that bill, and I hope we 
can pass this legislation with a very strong bipartisan vote.
  I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.


                                 Israel

  Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, early this week I joined with Senator Boxer 
to introduce the United States-Israel Strategic Partnership Act of 
2014. This is an updated version of bipartisan legislation we 
introduced in March of last

[[Page 13821]]

year. It is designed to help the economic strength, the security 
cooperation between our two countries.
  As of right now, Senator Boxer and I and 79 of our colleagues, 
including the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Senator 
Menendez, are cosponsors, so 81 Members have cosponsored this 
legislation at a very important time. I think it sends a message to the 
world and it sends a message to Israel that our partnership is strong. 
It sends the message that the Congress, starting with the Senate, is 
committed to that partnership. It says that not only do we want to have 
the kind of defensive understanding we have had so we have joint 
defense agreements, so we have the kind of equipment and supplies 
stationed in Israel that we need and use in a time of crisis or they 
could borrow from us in times of crisis, but also the economic 
partnerships in water, energy, in cybersecurity and other information. 
Certainly looking at what is happening in Gaza, looking at the unique 
relationship between our two countries, where at least two of the 
members of the Israeli Defense Forces who have been killed in the last 
few weeks have also been American citizens. Those two individuals, 
along with a number of others serving in the defense forces for Israel, 
backed up and supported by other Americans who go to Israel to support 
the defense of their country--this is a particularly important time to 
send this message. It is a message that there is broad agreement on in 
a bipartisan way, with virtually 81 Senators agreeing.
  I will turn to my friend with whom I have worked on this for 2 years 
now, Senator Boxer, to make a unanimous consent request so our bill can 
be done and this message sent to Israel and the world before we leave 
this week.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.


                   Unanimous Consent Request--S. 2673

  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, Israel faces 100 rocket attacks a day from 
a terrorist organization called Hamas. Israel is trying to cope with 
getting rid of tunnels that have been built by this terrorist 
organization, with one purpose: to send terrorists through those 
tunnels so they can kidnap, torture, and kill Israeli citizens.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the 
immediate consideration of Calendar No. 492, S. 2673; that the bill be 
read a third time and passed, and the motion to reconsider be 
considered made and laid upon the table, with no intervening action or 
debate.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  The Senator from Tennessee.
  Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I just want 
to say the partnership Senator Blunt and Senator Boxer have on this 
issue is one that I think is spectacular. I have talked to both of them 
ad nauseam about this issue. Senator Blunt and I have had multiple 
conversations this week. He is one of our great leaders in this body 
and is always trying to find a way to come to a solution. Senator Boxer 
and I have worked on another issue this week, and I cannot tell you how 
much I have enjoyed working with her office.
  This is an actual bill. This is not a resolution. In order to try to 
expedite this being able to come to the floor before we go to the 
August recess, we had scheduled a committee meeting here today, one 
impromptu, but to go through the normal committee process. I thank 
Chairman Menendez for his cooperation and willingness to do that.
  As it was scheduled, it is my understanding that a number of Members 
had amendments to this bill. I know for that reason--and I understand 
this fully--the business meeting to actually have a markup in committee 
was then canceled. I know the chairman of EPW has committee protocol, 
and when committee members want to amend things they try to go through 
that protocol. I know Senator Blunt, being the leader he has been in 
the House and here, understands that process.
  I am going to, over the next hour or so--I have a little time here--
check with committee members and see, relative to the normal protocols, 
how they might feel about this coming directly to the floor. I just 
tried to do that a minute ago, but knowing this is not the typical way 
of doing things and knowing that people actually had some amendments--I 
know there were some reservations about the visa waiver process and 
other things--I am going to have to object. I do so with total respect 
for these two Senators but also for respect for the committee process 
we all try to work through together. So with that, I object.
  I do not know how long we are going to be in this evening but----
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  Mr. CORKER. I thank the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, if you sense some emotion and anger in my 
voice, I have it. I am shocked and deeply saddened that my friend would 
come here and object, when for days and days and days he told me--he 
told me--he would not do this. My friend told me he would not object.
  This bill has the support of 81 Senators. To come here and object 
that his committee, which I am so proud to be--as a matter of fact, I 
am a senior person on that committee. My chairman is one of the great 
chairmen of the U.S. Senate. We bent over backward. I wanted to offer 
this on Monday with Senator Blunt. He was disappointed. I said: I am 
talking to Senator Corker. We are trying to work together. Eighty one 
Senators support this, and 1 Senator comes and says: Oh, it is a little 
bit--we need to go to the committee. There is a war going on. Hamas has 
put on its channel proudly showing terrorists going through tunnels.
  This bill is absolutely critical. It is an updated version of the 
bipartisan legislation we introduced last March. We worked for 16 
months. We had issues with the visa waiver. We tried to take it through 
the committee in May. They tried to attach amendments on Iran. We need 
to work hard with the administration on the Iran issue. It is critical. 
But there is a war going on. This bill is critical, and I am so 
grateful to Senator Blunt and all of my cosponsors.
  In passing this bill today, the Senate would send a clear and 
unequivocal message. Let's be clear. We are leaving town. I do not want 
to leave town, but we are leaving town, and we are not going to have a 
chance, with all due respect to my friend, to take a look at this for a 
long time. This is the time, on the way out the door, to send an 
unequivocal message to our ally.
  Hamas continues to escalate through those tunnels. We all mourn every 
civilian life lost--every life lost on either side. Think about it. If 
in our country we had rockets coming over here from Canada or from 
Mexico or from the sea into our Nation, what would we do? What would we 
do?
  Concrete that was meant to build up Gaza--and I stood at that line 
when Israel gave up Gaza, gave it up. I was proud they did it, and I 
thought: What a chance for the Palestinians. I feel for them because 
Hamas has taken over and they use that concrete that was meant to 
rebuild for tunnels. I watched the video. I saw the terrorists go 
through, proudly bearing their weapons, sneaking up on a post and 
killing five Israelis. They tried to kidnap their bodies but they were 
unable to do it.
  So if not now, when is the time to pass this legislation? To say it 
is bipartisan is an understatement. Almost the entire Senate is on it. 
We all know there are a lot of important issues. My goodness. I am 
going to be standing here and talking about a lot of them.
  This is an emergency. That is why this United States-Israel Strategic 
Partnership Act is so critical, including our assistance for the Iron 
Dome missile defense system.
  What is important in our bill is we increase by $200 million the 
value of U.S. weapons we hold, we stockpile in Israel to a total of 
$1.8 billion. At the rate these rockets are coming over, at the rate 
these tunnels need to be destroyed, we need to act. We need to act. We 
need to send a clear message to our friend Israel, and it sends a 
message to Hamas.
  I have to say, yes, we have a visa waiver program in here. Guess what 
it does. It treats Israel the same way we

[[Page 13822]]

treat other countries. I will read the names of those countries: 
Lithuania, Latvia, Hungary, Slovakia, Estonia, and the Czech Republic. 
Why shouldn't Israel have that same opportunity? We worked on this 
provision. I know my friend has problems, but we fixed those 
provisions. We have given maximum flexibility on those provisions.
  So I am sad--that is an understatement--I am distressed, I am shocked 
and stunned that this afternoon, before we go out the door, with 81 
Senators on a bill--a bill we actually passed a couple years ago, a 
similar bill, and the House passed a similar bill--that I have a 
friend, who is my friend--he is my friend--treating this Senator and 
the chairman in a way that I think is so unfair and to me betrays all 
the days that we talked about this, the weeks we talked about this, the 
way we have fixed this legislation.
  Most of all, I think it is a dark moment--a dark moment--when we 
would walk away from this opportunity to take a stand against 
terrorism.
  I thank the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
  Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I would just like to say that, look, I do 
not know what happened. We had a committee meeting scheduled today. The 
Senator is right that I agreed not to object to this and also not to 
offer any amendments in committee, and if it came through committee I 
was perfectly fine with it being unanimously consented to.
  For some reason, the Senator caused the committee hearing to be 
called off. So she is exactly right, I would not be down here objecting 
to something being discharged from committee had the committee meeting 
not been called off.
  I say to the chairman--I talked to him late last night. I thank him 
for trying to make this process work in the right way, and I thank his 
staff for being willing to set up a committee meeting today. But for 
some reason, the Senator from California decided she did not want to 
have the committee meeting.
  I am sorry she is sad. I am a little emotional now that she would 
suggest that I would agree to UC something, when I--yes, I will if it 
comes through committee. I do not understand why the committee was 
called off. But apparently the committee--the person sponsoring this 
bill apparently does not want to vote on amendments other members want 
to offer. Not me. I had no idea any members wanted to offer amendments, 
by the way, but they did, and I am sorry this has not worked out 
either. But that is the way it is. I have no idea why the committee 
meeting was called off. I would love for the Senator to tell me that.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I think my colleague knows absolutely the 
reason why. All this is just disingenuous. My friend knows--we 
discussed it--that if we load down this bill with extraneous amendments 
on other subjects it would never pass. We know that. I have been around 
here a long time. I know how a bill becomes a law, and thank God I 
learned it.
  One thing I know. When you start loading down a very important piece 
of legislation that is emergency legislation with unrelated amendments, 
it is not going to be able to be done on the way out the door, and my 
friend knows it. We have----
  Mr. CORKER. Well----
  Mrs. BOXER. Excuse me. I have the time.
  My friend can get emotional about process. Be my guest. I am not 
emotional about process. I am emotional about results. How would the 
Senator feel if he had a terrorist group digging tunnels under his 
cities? That is an issue separate and apart from our agreement we have 
to have a good agreement on Iran. But you know when you start amending 
these bills like that, they are not going to go through on unanimous 
consent.
  So I am disheartened, disappointed, saddened, and I think everybody 
knows what has happened here.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
  Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, let me say one more time, I have no 
amendments to offer to this bill. I was in no way going to load down 
this bill with any amendments. I just asked that it go through a 
committee process. By the way, if amendments should not be added to a 
bill, typically what happens is people vote them down. I would assume 
that had we had a committee meeting today--I know we had one scheduled 
earlier today--extraneous amendments would have been voted down. But 
with that, I am certainly, I can tell you at this point, ready to 
dismiss this issue. I have no desire to try to call members of the 
committee at this moment to try to resolve this. I am very disappointed 
that the Senator from California would take liberties to say such 
things that this Senator would come down and agree to a unanimous 
consent without it going through committee.
  I thank the chairman again for agreeing to do that. But it was called 
off because there were amendments. I understand that. I really do. But 
that is the prerogative. I think the Senator from Wyoming--standing in 
the well--had an amendment he wanted to have heard. I have not even 
seen the amendment. But that is what people do in a committee process. 
Again, if they do not want it attached to a bill, what they typically 
do is vote down the amendment.
  But I am very disappointed in the comments by the Senator from 
California. It looks as if this will not be heard. I am sorry.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I came to the floor in the first 
instance to support Senator Boxer's unanimous consent request on the 
U.S.-Israel strategic partnership, which, as she has pointed out, has--
in this institution we do not very often get 81 Members to agree that 
there is a course of action we want to take. She and Senator Blunt have 
acquired 81 cosponsors--including me and a majority of the Senate 
Foreign Relations Committee--to do exactly that.
  Given the current situation in the region, I think the legislation 
sends the right message at the right time. Israel clearly has a right 
to self-defense. No country should stand by while thousands of rockets 
are being launched at it and a terrorist organization next door digs 
tunnels to funnel fighters into its country to kill its citizens. That 
is what is happening.
  Part of the effort of this legislation, the U.S.-Israel cooperation--
well, one example is an antimissile system called Iron Dome, which is 
an example of what our two countries can do together--save lives 
through technological advancement and defense cooperation. I think 
these are incredibly important opportunities.
  Beyond that, given the advances in shared achievement that have 
resulted from this U.S.-Israel partnership, this bill authorizes the 
President to further enhance cooperation in the fields of water, 
energy, homeland security, agriculture, and alternative-fuel 
technology.
  But the U.S.-Israel partnership extends far beyond our excellent 
security partnership. Senator Boxer's legislation does just that. It 
authorizes increased, enhanced, and enriched cooperation that reflects 
the critical importance of our bilateral relationship. It goes into 
Israel's energy security.
  Not long ago Israel was completely dependent on energy imports, but 
given recent discoveries they may soon be energy independent. But they 
need help. Thanks in part to work by Senator Landrieu, this bill would 
help provide the technical know-how on how to regulate a responsible 
natural gas extraction industry, how to charge and collect royalties, 
and how to plan for distribution and export networks. In other words, 
this bill can help make Israel an energy provider for the region and 
for Europe, greatly enhancing Israel's energy security and forming 
important economic ties with its neighbors.
  There are a lot of reasons for the Senate to pass this legislation 
and particularly to do so now.
  Let me address the process question. The ranking member did ask me 
late yesterday to have a markup. When we

[[Page 13823]]

talk about process, we called for a markup in short order, without the 
regular timeframe, but also with what was, for me, an understanding 
that there were going to be no amendments. It was going to be an up-or-
down vote on the legislation. If I had understood there were going to 
be amendments offered, then we would have had to have a timeframe to 
know what amendments they were going to be so Members could consider 
what those amendments are and could judge them--not at the spur of the 
moment when we sat down and convened a meeting but so they could make 
an informed judgment.
  Because it was a truncated process, which I was trying to accommodate 
the ranking member on, and because I felt we were going to go through 
basically an up-or-down vote, I called for the meeting. But then, 
unbeknownst to us, all of a sudden we were told there were going to be 
a series of amendments--amendments which were not even filed and for 
which there was no timeframe and therefore would come at a moment's 
notice when the meeting was convened and with no one having had the 
opportunity to understand the nature, substance, or consequences of 
those amendments. In my mind, that is not regular order.
  So maybe there was a misunderstanding, but because there was a clear 
understanding, from my perspective, to do it in an irregular fashion--
very short notice, with no amendment filing deadlines--but in order to 
accommodate the concern that legislation should not come but through 
the committee and onto the floor, I agreed to a special session, a 
special business meeting. Unfortunately, I do not know whether there is 
a misunderstanding of agreements here, but that is the nature under 
which I agreed.
  When I found out there were going to be all types of amendments, 
including amendments that are extraneous to the subject matter, I 
decided we could not do that in good order and in reasonable 
conscience, so we pulled down the business meeting.
  Let me say that I understand we have two concurrent resolutions 
pending before the Senate on the use of human shields by Hamas and 
supporting Israel's security. I support the substance of both of those 
Republican resolutions. However, I am not willing to allow them to move 
and provide lipservice to Israel's security when Members of the same 
party are preventing us from taking real action to support Israel's 
security by objecting to this bill, even though I do not question my 
distinguished colleague, who has worked incredibly well with me over 
the last year and a half, about what his concerns are about process. 
But we can't have Members want to offer all types of amendments, 
including extraneous amendments to this bill, and then say ``But we are 
asking the chairman to release the resolutions on human shields''--
which I in substance support--``from the committee,'' but when we can 
really do something for Israel, which is to pass this legislation, to 
say ``No, we cannot go through this process because it is not regular 
order.'' It is also not regular order to allow resolutions not to come 
through the committee as well. I hope that maybe in the timeframe there 
might be a way to consult with Members on both sides of the aisle to 
see if there can be a resolution.
  I do not judge anybody's purposes. But let me make it clear for the 
record that, yes, we did have a special business meeting. It was out of 
the regular order as to how we would call such a meeting and the 
procedures we would have for such a meeting. But it was done in good 
faith in order to accommodate the ultimate goal, which is passing an 
incredible piece of legislation at an incredibly important period of 
time.
  I see my colleague wants to say something. I have something else to 
say that is not related.
  I will yield.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
  Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I want to say that everything the chairman 
has said is absolutely correct. Of course, the committee can meet with 
the consent of everyone willing to do so. I appreciate him and his 
willingness to do that.
  I will say one of the members--I am actually speaking through the 
Chair to the chairman, if I could. I just had one of the members on the 
floor walk by and share with me that he really was not going to ask for 
a vote on amendments; he just wanted to share some thoughts but was 
going to pull them.
  I understand how the chairman would want to pull down a committee 
meeting if there were going to be lots of amendments, and I assure you 
I had no idea there would be any amendments. But I know some people 
brought some forward. My sense is that there may not have been a desire 
to have a vote on those, especially based on one of the Senators on our 
committee just walking by and sharing that with me. So what I might do 
in the interim is get on the phone and see if the committee members who 
had amendments actually wanted a vote on those or just wanted to 
express concerns. Maybe it is possible, within the time left, to handle 
this in a way that works for all.
  But I very much appreciate the chairman's willingness. I want to say 
to him again that I had no idea people had amendments to offer.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. If I may through the Chair--I appreciate that.
  Let me just say we were told there were amendments for the purposes 
of votes. Maybe that did not end up being the ultimate intention of 
some; others may have wanted votes. But I will say to the distinguished 
ranking member that if there are colleagues who want to express a 
reservation but are not seeking a vote, they would have the opportunity 
to come to the floor. I am sure we could carve out some time under 
which we could talk about what those reservations are. They would be 
fully on the record, and we might find a pathway forward to being able 
to cast a vote on this bill. But I will leave that for my colleague and 
his conversations with his colleagues on the Republican side of the 
aisle.
  Mr. CORKER. I will close by saying that I think it is perfectly fair 
for the chairman to say that if we can't have a bill like this 
discharged on the floor, then other resolutions which sometimes do come 
to the floor without going through committee because they do not have a 
binding effect--I can understand why he would take that position.
  But I really do appreciate the way the chairman has worked with me on 
so many occasions. Again, I am disappointed in the comments that were 
made earlier. But this is the understanding we have had. I think had 
the committee process gone forward, we probably would not have had 
votes. But we will just see.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, before Senator Corker leaves the floor, I 
want to make sure I understand because maybe there is a window of 
opportunity to revisit this. I want to make sure I heard what he said.
  It was my clear understanding--and the Senator said he does not know 
why I thought this--that my friend would not object to this if it came 
to the floor. I had staff conversations. I know the Senator is saying 
after it came out of committee, but there were other conversations I am 
privy to staff to staff. So let me say that.
  Is it my friend's interest to go and talk to Senator Barrasso in 
particular--a friend of mine--and see whether he was just going to use 
these amendments as talking points? If, in fact, he was not going to do 
that, call for a vote, and he stands down, would my friend allow us to 
get this done tonight just given the moment in time in which we find 
ourselves at this late hour?
  Mr. CORKER. Well, I would say that every time I get a sense I want to 
do that, the Senator from California says something that challenges the 
integrity of another Senator, so it makes me not wish to do that. So I 
don't know.

[[Page 13824]]

  I will say that I am going to leave here and take into account--I 
have always understood that if it went through the committee, even 
though there are some issues I have with this legislation, because of 
the fact that we have so many cosponsors, I do not want to be one 
Senator who holds up a piece of legislation. I want the will of the 
body to work. I always have. But I did want it to go through the 
committee process, and it was called off.
  I wish the Senator from California would quit saying things that I do 
not believe to be the case. We tried to make it go through the right 
way today. I really did. I appreciate so much the chairman and the way 
he works with me in that regard. But we will see. I get disappointed 
every time another word is said about this, and sort of characterizing 
not the way I understand we were going to do this. But we will see. I 
appreciate everybody's time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. I would say to my dear friend and distinguished ranking 
member that I know how he feels about his integrity and the process. I 
respect that. Only because the stakes are so high are the passions so 
strong with what is going on with Israel right now. So I would urge my 
distinguished ranking member to maybe have that informal survey with 
members and see if there is a way in which reservations could be 
expressed, and we might be able to move this legislation on the floor.
  I have worked with the Senator other times and on other issues and we 
have worked with each other, and I hope this might be a moment in which 
we could actually achieve that as well. I have nothing but the greatest 
admiration for the Senator's work and cooperation.


                      Supplemental Appropriations

  I wish to move to another equally important topic and in part respond 
to my colleague from Texas. That is the question of the supplemental 
and the comments made that we are unwilling to do what the House has 
been incapable of doing so far--at least the last time I checked. I do 
not know if something has happened since I came to the floor, but the 
House has been incapable of even sending what they viewed as their 
supplemental.
  I do not know exactly why we would be blamed for not voting on 
something the House has not even passed, No. 1.
  Yes, there are many of us who will oppose what the House is sending 
because, No. 1, it doesn't even provide the resources necessary for an 
emergency--an emergency of unforeseen dimension: a refugee crisis and a 
humanitarian crisis that needs to be dealt with.
  When we look at the proposals that are contemplated in the House, not 
only do they not fund appropriately to meet the challenge, they 
misappropriate how they are going to do funding to meet this crisis.
  I don't know that we need to militarize the border, because no one is 
threatening the border so far as the consequences of any violence. I 
don't know that a National Guardsman with a rifle is necessary against 
an 8-year-old. I really don't. We heard our colleague from Texas say: 
Well, these children are actually submitting themselves to the Border 
Patrol, not trying to flee them.
  So part of what the House of Representatives wants is to spend 
millions of dollars for the National Guard. I would rather spend it on 
the Border Patrol, not the National Guard. We don't need to militarize 
our border.
  I would like to make sure that when a child does come over, having 
fled 2,000 miles because they were raped or a child was told by the 
gang to join us or die or a child who saw their father or mother killed 
before them and thought they would be the next one--that if that 
happens to be the case for that child, that they would have the 
opportunity to make their case, and they can't do that in 72 hours.
  I was at the same meeting earlier today with the President, which was 
really about national security. But the Senator from Texas raised this 
question--and it is a legitimate question to raise--and I didn't hear 
the same response in the context that the Senator from Texas 
characterized that response.
  The President said there has to be due process; but yet we need to 
find a way to try to accelerate that process but within the context of 
due process, and not to strip away the law that was passed in a 
bipartisan process and signed by a Republican President because he 
understood, as did the Congress at the time, that if you flee 2,000 
miles and actually get here, it must be a lot more than an economic 
refugee. It must be because you have a credible fear of the loss of 
your life or your safety. That is what is at stake here.
  Now, it boggles my mind that we cannot get a successful vote. I don't 
know if we will or we won't, but I get a sense from what I hear from my 
Republican colleagues that they won't cast a positive vote for the type 
of supplemental that would give the resources to meet the challenge. To 
do what? To put more people on the border in terms of Border Patrol. To 
do what? To create more immigration judges, to create more prosecutors.
  What are they going to all do, coddle the child? No. They are going 
to be enforcing the border--the border in States where some of my 
colleagues seem to be the biggest opponents of the supplemental. I 
don't get it.
  Now, I have never voted for a supplemental that is enforcement only, 
but I am ready to do it because this is an emergency. I understand the 
gravity of the situation, both on the human side as well as the 
national security question. But I can't fathom, for the life of me, the 
views that say: No, let's vote against the money and create a crisis 
which basically is going to leave us in a situation in which, if we do 
not pass the supplemental prior to leaving on this recess, monies for 
the Department of Homeland Security and Department of Health and Human 
Services for these purposes will run out. The crisis won't have been 
abated, but the situation will continue to exist and the monies will 
have run out, which means what the President said: Well, I am going to 
have to reallocate resources from within those Departments for other 
purposes; which means that other national security, homeland security, 
and other health issues are not going to have the resources to meet the 
challenges they are presently meeting. That is not in the collective 
interests of the country.
  So I am strongly going to support a supplemental that I would have 
never voted for because of the emergent nature of what we have. But at 
the same time we can't be about putting the National Guard at the 
border. It can't be about militarizing the border when there is no 
military threat, and it cannot be about stripping a law that was passed 
in a strong bipartisan vote and signed by a Republican President 
because they understood the nature of the potential challenge and they 
understood the very essence of a child fleeing 2,000 miles and having a 
shot--only a shot, no guarantee--that they in fact make their case.
  That would send a message across the globe, as we are telling other 
countries in the world--in Africa; in Jordan, where we tell them to 
handle the Syrian refugees; in Turkey, where we tell them to handle the 
Syrian refugees; in the Dominican Republic, when there was the 
hurricane and we said let the Haitians come on over--we can't handle 
the humanitarian needs of children who have a credible sense and a 
credible case about fear for their life. Not every child will have that 
case, and those will be deported. But not every child should be 
automatically denied either.
  Mrs. BOXER. I wish to engage with my friend in a bit of a colloquy 
here.
  I listened to the Senator from Texas, Senator Cornyn--who is working 
to try to solve these problems--lament the fact that Democrats in the 
House would not go along with the Republican version of this emergency 
appropriation. So I went back and I asked my staff to detail--and my 
friend did that.
  I want to make sure that he agrees with what I think basically was in 
there: First of all, a change in the 2008 law that President George W. 
Bush signed, written by Senator Feinstein and others--quite 
bipartisan--to treat

[[Page 13825]]

these children with human dignity and ascertain that in fact they had a 
real problem. If they didn't have a real problem, send them back home; 
and if they did have a real problem, make sure they were safe here. So 
that was in there. Then, as my friend said, the National Guard piece 
was in there.
  Now, what is really interesting is these children are coming over, 
and they are saying to the Border Patrol: Take me.
  So I don't mind having the National Guard at the border if we really 
have to defend, et cetera. I have come after that in the past.
  But it just seems to me--and my friend made the point--it is one 
thing to put Border Patrol on and it is another thing to send down the 
military to face off with these children.
  The other thing is, of course, they strip down the money dramatically 
so that these kids may well have to remain in some of the worst 
conditions in these customs facilities.
  Now, the question I really want to talk to my friend about is this. I 
researched this today and asked to find out, every year, how many 
foreign nationals become legal residents under current law even without 
changing our law. We know the immigration bill didn't pass over there. 
It is 1 million a year. Every year, we take 1 million foreign 
nationals, and they become legal residents in America.
  Doesn't my friend believe that since we take 1 million people a year 
in legally, we can deal with 56,000 children, that we can do that, that 
we have the capacity to do that? We know, if it follows trends, that 
most of them will be placed with relatives or caring friends, a few may 
not be, and some will be sent back.
  But doesn't my friend believe, in this great Nation of immigrants--I 
am a first-generation American on my mother's side. My mother was born 
in Europe and her whole family escaped before the Holocaust. I don't 
think there is anyone in this Chamber, unless they are Native American, 
who can say truly at one time their relatives weren't immigrants.
  My friend is so eloquent on the point. We handle 1 million foreign 
nationals becoming permanent legal residents every year. Don't we think 
America has the capacity to handle 56,000 children?
  Mr. MENENDEZ. I appreciate my colleague's point. I would say America 
certainly has the capacity to give the legal opportunity for those 
children to make the case that they have asylum. And when we fail to do 
so, I think we undermine our own principles. We undermine our own 
history, we undermine our own legal obligation under existing law, and 
we also undermine our standing in the world when we ask others to take 
in refugees but we say in our case that we cannot.
  Mrs. BOXER. I thank the Senator.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Hirono). The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. LEE. Madam President, before I get on to my remarks regarding 
immigration, I wish to echo briefly the sentiments expressed by my 
friends, Senators Ayotte and Cruz, who spoke on the floor earlier this 
afternoon.
  I believe the Senate should immediately take up and pass the 
Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act--a bill that cleared the House with 
a bipartisan voice vote and 228 House cosponsors--instead of 
manufacturing a crisis with a short-term extension that will let this 
very popular, very bipartisan policy be taken hostage.
  The situation at the border is indeed heartbreaking. Tens of 
thousands of single adults, families, and children have made an 
incredibly dangerous journey north from countries such as Guatemala, 
Honduras, and El Salvador. They are leaving these countries because 
they offer too little opportunity and are mired in poverty and 
violence. No one begrudges them for wanting to find a better place to 
live.
  Americans are compassionate and they are generous. The American 
people have always extended and always will extend a helping hand to 
every other corner of the world. And even as the number of illegal 
border crossings has exploded over the past year, we have treated these 
individuals with dignity and respect.
  Today we have on our southern border a multifaceted crisis that faces 
the entire country. But President Obama is not interested in solving 
the humanitarian problem or the security problem or the legal problem 
or the fiscal problem. He is interested only in solving a personal 
political problem--avoiding blame for this crisis which he himself has 
created.
  For years the President's clear message to the world has been that he 
is not interested in enforcing or fixing America's immigration laws. He 
is unconcerned about strengthening our border, improving our entry-exit 
system or bolstering the workplace verification. He has made no effort 
to fix our visa system so that we have an efficient process to serve 
immigrants trying in good faith to obey the law. He has ignored serious 
immigration reforms that would solve these problems.
  So what has the President been doing on immigration? Systematically 
undermining the rule of law by ignoring the laws that are already on 
the books, taking action he has no authority to take, and blaming 
others for the consequent failures.
  That is what has led us here today, considering what hypothetical 
actions Congress can take to address the real crisis the President has 
created.
  But the solutions to this immediate crisis and our longer term 
immigration needs as well begin with the President finally enforcing 
the law. There is no amount of money that Congress can spend. There is 
no new law that can solve this crisis if the President and the 
leadership of his party continue down their current path.
  There are several steps the President can take immediately that do 
not require any action by Congress or another dime from the American 
people.
  He can stop abusing what he refers to as ``prosecutorial 
discretion.'' He can end the DACA program, which provides 
administrative amnesty and work permits to those who enter the United 
States illegally as minors. He can close the door to any further 
expansion of DACA to millions of additional adults. And he can signal 
his commitment to this solution by quickly returning those who entered 
the United States illegally to their home countries.
  But by announcing to the world--the entire world--that he will not 
enforce laws requiring DHS to process and return those who come here 
unlawfully, the President is encouraging hundreds of thousands of 
children and adults to make this very dangerous journey to come to the 
United States illegally. He is encouraging families to pay coyotes 
controlled by drug cartels thousands of dollars to smuggle their 
children into the United States. That is truly the humanitarian crisis.
  The President's threats to widen the scope of DACA are only going to 
make this crisis worse. That is why I agree with my friends Ted Cruz, 
Jeff Sessions, David Vitter, Jim Inhofe, and Mike Johanns that at the 
very least we must take steps to prevent the President from providing 
any more Executive amnesty.
  I understand the desire for Members of Congress to want to pass some 
kind of legislation. Members want to be able to go home to their 
constituents over the August recess armed with talking points that 
suggest they have done something about the border crisis. But I would 
argue that the bill before the Senate today is just a distraction from 
the true cause of and true solution to the crisis.
  Congress could send the President a bill with billions of dollars in 
aid and multiple policy changes, but none of these will work unless the 
President makes a commitment to enforce our laws and secure our 
southern border. Congress could do that, but none of it will work 
unless Congress does what needs to be done.
  As with so many bills Congress takes up these days, this legislation 
does not solve the American people's problems; it only solves 
Washington's problems.
  President Obama already has the authority to correct the failed 
policy, to restore the rule of law to our immigration system and solve 
the crisis on the border. He just doesn't want to, and the American 
people are paying the price.

[[Page 13826]]

  One of the reasons we have a constitution of separated powers is that 
when Presidents try to be legislators too, they tend to be bad at both 
jobs. The crisis on the border is of the President's own making, and 
its solution is already in his own power.
  I stand ready to work with the President and members of his party to 
craft solutions to these problems--we all do--but until President Obama 
enforces the laws he is sworn to administer, those solutions will 
remain out of reach.
  For all the good intentions, all the good will, with all the 
compromises in the world, Congress cannot do its job until the 
President finally does his.
  Thank you, Madam President.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
  Mr. CARPER. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that once I 
finish speaking--I will talk for less than 10 minutes, and I ask that 
the senior Senator from Utah, Mr. Hatch, be recognized next.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. CARPER. Madam President, I would like to say to the Senator from 
Utah, who is a dear friend and the ranking Republican on the Finance 
Committee, that something magical happened here about 48 hours ago 
right here in this Chamber. What happened is we saw the Senate evolve 
in a very good way. We saw Senators bringing amendments to the floor, 
Democratic and Republican. We saw them having a chance to offer 
amendments, debate the amendments, and get votes on the amendments. And 
it was on an important issue. The issue was how we were going to 
provide and fund the transportation system for our country, which 
includes roads, highways, bridges, tunnels, transit systems, and more.
  At the end of the day, 79 Senators, Democratic and Republican, a 
majority of Republicans and Democrats, voted to say we would like to 
make sure we don't run out of money in the Federal transportation trust 
fund this year. We are going to replenish that trust fund but not for a 
year or a year and a half but for a relatively short period of time--
until the end of the year, really until the end of December. Why would 
we stop there? It is because we believe that if we keep on going--for 
example, one of the proposals coming over from the House was to fund 
the transportation program until maybe next May or next June. Our fear 
and the fear of 79 Senators who voted--I think with their conscience--
our fear was that we will get to next May 31 and say: Well, we can't 
make these votes. It is too tough to pass a 6-year transportation 
program for our country. Let's just cobble together enough revenues 
from disparate sources that have nothing to do with transportation, do 
what my friend Senator Bob Corker calls generational theft and steal 10 
years' of revenues and use it to fix highways and bridge problems for 3 
or 4 or 5 months. That is what we have been doing for the last 5 years. 
We have done it 11 times.
  What we have done is we said to Governors and State departments of 
transportation and others who are trying to build highways, roads, and 
transportation highway systems: We are going to give you a little bit 
of money, and you can count on it for a couple of months. If it runs 
out, we will try to do it some more.
  Stop and go. It is hugely inefficient. It is hugely inefficient. I 
speak as on old Governor--not that old--as a recovering Governor, a 
former Governor, and have some idea of all the work put into these 
projects. Take, for example, when you plan your highway, bridge, or 
transit system. You have to plan the project, you have to fund the 
project, you have to contract the project, and you have to get permits 
for the project. It takes years. And providing that we have the 
revenues--or won't we--will the Federal Government be there as a 
partner? The kind of system we have is wasteful--or at least the kind 
of system we have shown in recent years.
  A bunch of us say: Why don't we Senators--Democratic and Republican--
do our job and fund a 6-year transportation program for our country?
  For the most part, I think for myself and for many, why don't we stop 
using sources of revenue that have absolutely nothing to do with 
transportation? Why don't we just stop taking money from the general 
fund, which borrows money from China and all kinds of other places 
around the world? Why don't we fund it ourselves? For projects that are 
worth having, we ought to pay for them.
  Last Tuesday night, 2 nights ago, this Senate worked, and it was a 
joy to behold. At the end of the day we passed and sent over to the 
House of Representatives legislation that said we are going to not let 
the transportation trust fund run out of money this year. We are not 
going to kick the can down the road. We will keep this on a short leash 
and make sure that when we come back after the election, we will be 
likely to actually fund a 6-year transportation program.
  It is a smart approach and a principled approach.
  I want to say a big thank-you to a couple of people. I want to say to 
Senator Bob Corker, the Republican from Tennessee, and Senator Barbara 
Boxer, Democrat from California, who chairs the Environment and Public 
Works Committee on which I serve as the chairman of the Transportation 
and Infrastructure Subcommittee, I thank you for your leadership. Thank 
you for standing up for doing the right thing.
  Andrew Jackson used to say, ``One man with courage makes a 
majority.'' Mr. Jackson, I would like to say said one woman with 
courage makes a majority. But in this case we had a courageous 
Republican from Tennessee and a courageous Democrat from California, 
and they let me draft it. The three of us put together this proposal. 
We worked with Senator Ron Wyden, who chairs the Finance Committee. We 
appreciate very much his support for our proposal as well.
  At the end of the day, 79 Senators said it was the right thing to do. 
It went over to the House. The House, to my disappointment--not to my 
surprise but to my disappointment--said: No, we are going to strip off 
what the Senate has done in a bipartisan way, and we are just going to 
go back to what we sent to you some time ago--which, I must say, is not 
likely to get a 6-year transportation program funded anytime soon--not 
this year and probably not anytime soon. They said that to us.
  But there is good news. There is good news. Seventy-nine Senators--
again, over half of the Republicans and almost all the Democrats--said: 
We want to do our job and we want to do it this year. We want to fully 
fund the transportation plan for the next 6 years.
  That is what the people want us to do. That is what State and local 
governments want us to do, what mayors and Governors want us to do. 
People who work and build roads, highways, bridges, transit systems--
that is what they want us to do. Contractors, the business community, 
labor unions--that is what they want us to do. Do our job. And we are 
prepared to do it.
  The good news out of all of this is 79 of us are prepared to do that, 
and I suspect some others who may have voted the other way Tuesday 
night are prepared as well.
  I thank Bob Corker and Barbara Boxer and Ron Wyden and others who are 
part of this vote of 79 for the leadership they provided.
  I want to say to my friend Senator Orrin Hatch, whom I love and love 
working with and with whom I am pleased to serve on the Finance 
Committee--I have admired him forever--that when we come back into 
session after the election, the lameduck session, my hope and prayer is 
that we will all be able to work together and get this job done. I know 
Senator Hatch, and I think he is the kind of person who will help get 
it done.
  Let me close with this thought, if I could, and then I will yield to 
the Senator from Utah. To my pleasure, one of the things that happened 
during the last several weeks and months was the establishment of a 
broad-based coalition of business, labor, State and local governments, 
all kinds of organizations and people who came together and said: Do 
the right thing. They told us to do the right thing. They have been 
terrific supporters and have encouraged our

[[Page 13827]]

colleagues, Democratic and Republican, to join with Senators Corker, 
Boxer, Wyden, and me to do what we did Tuesday night.
  That coalition is not going away. They worked the House of 
Representatives very hard in the last 2 days,--the last 48 hours--and 
they are not going away. When we come back here after the election, 
they will come back strong, and we will too. We are not going to go 
away on this issue.
  One of the most important things we do as Senators and 
Representatives is to provide a transportation system that is worthy of 
this country. It helps with the movement of people and goods that we 
need to be a strong and efficient economy and nation.
  I will close with the words of Mark Twain. I used them the other 
night, and Senator Hatch has heard these words before. The words of 
Mark Twain all those years ago: When in doubt, do what is right. You 
will confound your enemies and astound your friends.
  Seventy-nine of us the other night did what we thought was right and 
what I am sure was right, and we are going to come back in a couple of 
months and we will have a chance to have our colleagues join us and 
really, as a whole body--hopefully with the House of Representatives 
and the President too--do our job, make sure we have the roads, 
highways, bridges, and transportation systems we need in this country.
  Again, my thanks to the Senator from Utah for letting me ramble on a 
bit, and I want to express once again my admiration for him. I look 
forward to working with him not just on this issue but on many others 
in the years to come.
  With that, Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. I thank my dear friend for his kind remarks, and I 
understand how much zeal he has for the things he does here on the 
floor. He is a fine man, and I really appreciate it.
  Madam President, earlier today--just a little while ago, in fact--the 
House of Representatives once again passed legislation extending 
funding for the Federal highway trust fund. This is the latest step in 
the process for which the final outcome has been known for some time. 
The bill the House passed today is virtually identical to the one they 
passed last week. It is basically the very same bill.
  Earlier this week the Senate passed its own version of the highway 
bill and sent it to the House. Of course, we did so knowing full well 
the House would not accept the Senate bill. I don't think there was 
ever any real doubt in this Chamber as to what was going to happen, but 
in my view it is good that the Senate acted.
  I was particularly pleased to see that the version of the highway 
bill reported by the Senate Finance Committee received such strong 
bipartisan support when it came up for a vote. Senator Wyden and I 
worked hard on that bill. The effort was bipartisan from the outset, 
and in the end we produced a product that both parties could support. 
Of course, I was a little less pleased that the Senate on the very next 
vote opted to strike the Finance Committee's language and replace it 
with what is, in my view, a less viable vehicle for funding the highway 
trust fund, but in the end that is the direction a majority of the 
Senators decided to go, and I accepted it and am proud of everybody who 
participated.
  As I said, it is good that the Senate acted. But now the House has 
acted again. It is good that the Senate had some amendments for a 
change, and I think we all felt good about that. I felt a renewed 
spirit in the Senate because of this since it had been a year without 
having real amendments in a real process. Of course there were only 
four of them, but compared to what we have had over the last year, that 
still was an amazing occurrence. But now the House has acted again, and 
although there are likely to be a number of Senators who do not like 
the House bill, there doesn't appear to be enough time for the Senate 
to try once again to go in a different direction.
  As we all know, we are on the verge of a crisis with regard to 
funding for the highway trust fund. Congress needs to act immediately 
to prevent a shortfall in the trust fund and to ensure that the States 
can continue to plan and implement their highway projects. Thousands of 
jobs are at stake. If Congress doesn't pass a bill and get it to the 
President before we leave for recess, we will be doing a great 
disservice to a lot of people. We all know this. It is not a secret. It 
is not a surprise.
  As far as I can see, the only viable solution before the Senate today 
is to take up the House bill and pass it as is. Once again, we have all 
known this was the most likely outcome for some time now. It is time we 
accept it and move on. That is not to say that I am disappointed that 
we have to pass the House bill. As I said a number of times, if you 
compare the House bill with the one reported by the Senate Finance 
Committee--which, once again, received broad bipartisan support when it 
was voted on in the Senate earlier this week--you will see that the 
bills are not all that far apart in terms of policy. The core funding 
mechanisms are the same.
  The principal difference is that the Senate bill raises some revenue 
through some tax compliance provisions that are not in the House bill. 
The House bill goes a little further on pension smoothing than the 
Finance Committee bill does, and this has brought heartburn to a number 
of us in both bodies.
  These are not fundamental differences. Any Senator who supported the 
Finance Committee's bill should be able to support the House bill, 
which is a good thing, because as I said we don't have many other 
options if we want to get this done before the recess.
  I plan to support the House-passed highway bill. I urge all of my 
colleagues in the Senate to do the same.
  Finally, I wish to take a moment to address a major setback we 
encountered with regard to the temporary highway extension that passed 
in the Senate earlier this week. As we learned yesterday, the Senate-
passed bill has a shortfall of about $2.4 billion due to a drafting 
error. Some have suggested that this error originated in the Finance 
Committee's version of the legislation. However, anyone who takes the 
time to compare our language with that of the subsequently passed 
substitute amendment will find this is not the case.
  I am not here to point fingers or try to embarrass anyone, but I will 
say these are the types of mistakes that happen when tax policy is 
written outside of the tax-writing committee, and we should all be 
careful of that.
  The Finance Committee has an open and transparent process that allows 
for all of our numbers to be scrutinized well in advance. The committee 
has all the necessary expertise at its disposal to prevent these types 
of mishaps.
  I am well aware that mistakes happen. I would just like to suggest 
that fewer of these types of mistakes will happen in the future if the 
Finance Committee is allowed to do its work when it comes to writing 
tax policy. That is all I have to say on that matter.
  Once again, we are at a critical juncture. We need to get a temporary 
highway bill over the finish line. As far as I can see, the only way to 
do that is for us to take up and pass the House bill. As I stated 
earlier, this should not be a difficult lift. I think we can get this 
done in short order.
  It was a lot of fun to be on the floor--for the first time in about a 
year--where anybody who wanted to at least had a shot at being able to 
bring up an amendment for a vote. Four of our colleagues did get 
amendments up, and they were thrilled. Isn't it amazing we were 
thrilled about something the Senate ought to be doing every time we 
bring up a bill? We can get both sides together on a limited number of 
amendments, but we should not have either side demanding to approve or 
disapprove the amendments in advance, and that has been happening all 
too often in the Senate with the way it is being run.
  I love all of my colleagues. I love my friends on the other side. 
There is no use trying to kid about it, I care for everybody in this 
body, and I cared for everybody I have served with. I admit

[[Page 13828]]

that occasionally there have been Members whom I cared a little less 
for than most of the others, but the fact is this is a great body. We 
have had some great people on both sides of the aisle over the 38 years 
I have been in the Senate.
  We need to allow our committees to work. Let's allow our individual 
Senators to work too. Let's understand that we don't all come from the 
same State or the same jurisdiction. Each of us has a desire to 
represent his or her jurisdiction in the best possible manner. Frankly, 
we need to get this Senate back to where it is the greatest 
deliberative body in the world rather than just something that is run 
for the benefit of the majority. I don't want it to run for the benefit 
of the minority either.
  We can get together--just as we did on this bill--and do much better 
around here than we have been doing. I hope that as we go into the 
future, everybody in this body will want to work better together and 
quit playing politics with everything.
  We understand this is a political body, and we understand there will 
be politics played from time to time. It is kind of fun sometimes but 
not on everything, and especially not when it prevents what the Senate 
is truly all about, which is wide-open debates and wide-open 
amendments, and we certainly need to find a bipartisan way of working 
together.
  I particularly enjoyed working with Senator Wyden. He has made a 
distinguished effort to try to make things as bipartisan as he can, and 
that is hard to do around here anymore in both the House and Senate. 
The House is supposed to be a body that fights over everything, I 
guess, because it is a majoritarian body. But even then the House has 
had many Democratic amendments they could have stopped. While they have 
had many amendments, we have basically been stopped from being able to 
act as the Senate should act, which is to allow people the right to 
bring up their amendments and try to make points that maybe all of us 
would do well to consider from time to time.
  I am grateful I am a Member of this body, and I am grateful for the 
people I have served with all these years on both sides of the aisle. 
In all the time I have been here, there were only two people whom I 
thought had no redeeming value. I should not have said that, I guess, 
but there were two people whom I thought truly didn't have the Senate 
at heart and truly didn't do what I thought they should do. I have 
loved all the rest and appreciated them very much.
  I appreciate the leadership on both sides, but I just hope we can get 
past all of this bickering and start running the Senate as it has 
always been run. A lot of it started when you break the rules to change 
the rules, and this is what happens. It was a real mistake on the part 
of the majority to do that. They might not think so because they are 
packing the Federal courts with judges--most of whom would have gotten 
through. About 98 percent of the President's nominees were getting 
through and very few were even contested. The fact is that some have 
gotten through and others should never have gotten through to the 
Federal bench, and it is because of breaking the rules to change the 
rules. It is not right for either side to do that, but it has been 
done. Let's overcome it, and let's be the most deliberative body in the 
world today, and I think we can do it.
  I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Kaine). The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  All postcloture time having expired, the question is on agreeing to 
the motion to proceed.
  The motion was agreed to.

                          ____________________