[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 4]
[Senate]
[Pages 5007-5009]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




   PROTECTING VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS AND EMERGENCY RESPONDERS ACT OF 
                        2014--MOTION TO PROCEED

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I move to proceed to Calendar No. 333.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will report the motion.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       Motion to proceed to Calendar No. 333, H.R. 3979, a bill to 
     amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to ensure that 
     emergency services volunteers are not taken into account as 
     employees under the shared responsibility requirements 
     contained in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

  Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                      Tribute to Peter D. Robinson

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I have said often that people who work here 
in the Capitol are some of the most intelligent men and women anyplace 
in the world. They come here--as I explained to a group of people from 
Nevada this morning--dedicated to public service. They are not here to 
see how much money they can make. They are here to change people's 
lives. Today, the Senate is losing one of its brightest and most 
seasoned minds.
  A lawyer by trade, Pete Robinson came to the Senate in 2002. I knew 
Pete because he had worked in the House previously, when I served over 
there. I knew him as someone I always admired--people who are good 
runners. I saw Pete out running and I was amazed at his gracefulness 
and speed. I did a lot of running. I wasn't very graceful and didn't 
have a lot of speed, but I did a lot of running. Pete was the captain 
of his high school cross-country team. He was a good athlete, which I 
admire very much.
  From the moment he came to the Senate, the Office of Parliamentarian 
became a better place. He was as close to being indispensable as 
anyone. He has an incredible work ethic and tremendous experience--
having been the Parliamentarian in the House and here and having been 
in the private sector. He has a great memory and has made the Senate 
function as it should. Not many people can make that claim, especially 
today. So he will be missed. I will miss him personally.
  I love to joke with him and talk to him about his running days, like 
I talk about my running days, as if we were both still out running. But 
that is what life is all about. We look back at the things that we did. 
I am sure, just as the Presiding Officer knows, things you do as a 
younger man become better every day, and that is the way I look back on 
my athletic endeavors in that regard. Of course, talking just about 
myself, maybe I wasn't as good as I thought I was, but that didn't 
matter at the time. It made me feel good, and that is what athletics is 
all about--trying to build character.
  So Pete is going to be missed in his retirement, but he is going to 
have plenty to do. He has lots of hobbies: an avid gardener, a good 
cook--some say an amateur chef. I won't go that far, but he is a good 
cook, as I understand it. He can make his own furniture. So he is going 
to keep busy feeding and furnishing his wife Connie, their daughter 
Tara, son-in-law Ethan, and grandson Milo with the good things he has 
done.
  We will truly miss him. I appreciate his courtesies all the time to 
me, and, as far as I know, to everyone else.


                                Schedule

  Mr. President, following my remarks and those of the Republican 
leader, the Senate will be in a period of morning business until 10:30, 
with the Republicans controlling the first half and the majority the 
final half.
  Following morning business, the Senate will proceed to H.R. 4152. At 
noon there will be up to three rollcall votes: the Menendez-Corker 
substitute, passage of the Ukraine bill, and confirmation of Maria 
Contreras-Sweet to be Administrator of the Small Business 
Administration.
  Last night I filed cloture on John Owens to be a U.S. circuit judge, 
and on the motion to proceed to the legislative vehicle for the 
unemployment insurance bill. Under the rule the first cloture vote will 
be tomorrow morning.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                      Tribute to Peter D. Robinson

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I wish to say a word about our longtime 
colleague Peter Robinson, who is retiring this week.
  Peter joined the Office of the Senate Parliamentarian in 2002 and 
quickly distinguished himself as a standout talent. He brought a 
remarkable breadth of knowledge to a job that really requires it and a 
legendary facility for

[[Page 5008]]

reading and digesting complex legislation in record time. His 
colleagues describe him as kind of a genius, actually--somebody who can 
remember not only where he read something but the exact page on which 
he read it. According to Senate legend, one staffer actually showed up 
one day asking for the software program that he just assumed Peter had 
been using to analyze complex bills. He was that fast. He was that 
good.
  Peter has all sorts of interests and hobbies, so I am sure he will 
make very good use of his retirement, but he will be missed around 
here. Pete's colleagues will miss his professional skill and mastery of 
precedent and procedure, but they will also miss the good humor and the 
equanimity which have made him such a great colleague and such a 
valuable and respected member of the Senate family over the years. We 
wish Peter all the best.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The majority leader.


                                Ukraine

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, today is an important day for Ukraine and 
for all nations supporting international law, democracy, and decency. 
Later today the Senate will pass a bipartisan bill that provides much 
needed aid to stabilize Ukraine's economy.
  For those Russian leaders who have played a role in the 
destabilization of Ukraine, this legislation contains much needed 
repercussions against them. Remember, Russia is run by an oligarchy. 
One of the oligarchs is the President of that country--Putin. This bill 
is a reality check to him that the United States will not stand idly by 
while Russia plays the role of schoolyard bully.
  It seems to me that President Putin does not understand the way the 
world works today. It is almost as if Putin yearns for the days of 
Joseph Stalin. Times have changed since Stalin was around, the world 
has changed since Stalin was around, and it has changed for the better. 
The Cold War is over, along with fixtures such as the Iron Curtain, 
dueling superpowers, and brinksmanship. Yet it is almost as if Putin is 
living in a time warp. Russia's place in the world has transformed. It 
does not wield the global power it once did. The rest of the world has 
changed since Stalin's era, with other countries in leading roles.
  But the United States of America remains a beacon of hope to the 
whole world. Our economic, our military, our political power, and our 
influence are strong because we stand for freedom, democracy, and 
economic prosperity. Russia, on the other hand, led by this man who 
yearns for Stalin, is a nation of immense resources and potential for 
good. Yet they have chosen to wield its influence solely for self-
interests.
  Earlier this week President Obama said the following about Russia:

       Russia is a regional power that is threatening some of its 
     immediate neighbors--not out of strength, but out of 
     weakness. The fact that Russia felt compelled to go in 
     militarily and lay bare these violations of international law 
     indicates less influence, not more.

  President Obama is absolutely correct. Instead of using its influence 
to bring stability to neighboring countries, Putin has instead played 
the role of an antagonist. Look at what has taken place in Crimea and 
the country of Georgia. For what does Russia stand? For what does 
President Putin stand?
  As the world gets closer and closer to looking at Putin, it doesn't 
like what it sees. The product of Putin's two decades in leadership 
seems to be a disregard for national law, more corruption, and 
increased suppression of basic human rights. While countless of his own 
citizens have rallied in the streets pleading for more freedom, Putin 
and his cronies have concerned themselves with getting richer--not only 
with power but with money. These oligarchs have been ruthless in 
protecting their power and their money.
  Inside and outside of Russia, the President of Russia has displayed a 
penchant for being a bully. He imprisons political rivals and locks 
them up. He seizes the wealth from Russians who have displeased him. If 
they don't say or do exactly what he wants, he puts them in jail and 
takes their wealth. He has singlehandedly rolled back years of progress 
on equality. He has endorsed the persecution of his own country's gay 
and lesbian community. And once again he has invaded and occupied a 
nation for choosing democracy. Are these acts of a statesman? No. They 
are acts of a bully.
  As billions tuned in to the Olympics, I believe few were deluded by 
the fake veneer of Putin's Sochi show. In fact, all we saw was that 
Putin's Russia isn't working.
  I say every time I get on the floor that if he so likes the vote that 
took place in Crimea, why doesn't he have a vote of the people in 
Chechnya? Everyone knows why.
  I say to Mr. Putin: Operating by intimidation and belligerence will 
not work. In today's world, nations should work together through 
diplomacy and the rule of law.
  He has a choice to come back into the international community and 
honor international law or to continue to isolate Russia.
  Russian troops continue to mass at the border of Ukraine, but he 
should understand this: The consequences for his continued bullying 
will not end today and certainly not with this bill. His chest-thumping 
aggression is leading Russia only to isolation and irrelevance.
  My colleagues and I will continue to work to strengthen Ukraine's 
Government and its 46 million people. The bill before the Senate today 
sanctions and further isolates Putin and his inner circle. What we are 
doing here today is just the beginning.
  I support this legislation, and I am proud of my Senate colleagues 
who join in standing for the people of Ukraine. This is what we are 
doing.


                   Recognition of the Minority Leader

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


                             Real Solutions

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I will start by acknowledging the 
majority leader's candor yesterday in outlining his party's agenda for 
the rest of the year--in admitting he actually asked his party's 
``political arm,'' the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, to 
come up with it. Maybe he didn't intend to admit that his party's so-
called agenda is actually a political gambit or that it basically has 
one intent--to bail out imperiled Democrats, Democrats desperate to 
distract from how ObamaCare is devastating the middle class--but it 
slipped out anyway.
  But that wasn't the only Freudian slip we heard at yesterday's press 
conference. Here is a quote from one of the majority leader's top 
lieutenants:

       When we play the political games that we're playing here, 
     [middle-class families] feel that we are detached from their 
     priorities.

  Boy, I couldn't agree more with that. Maybe that is why even the 
press isn't taking this ``agenda'' seriously. The New York Times 
reported that helping struggling Americans is ``not really the point'' 
of Democrats' agenda and that a main goal is actually just ``to 
motivate the Democratic base'' and drive turnout in places they need to 
win in November. The Times also noted that the show votes associated 
with the Democratic agenda ``will be timed to coincide with campaign-
style trips [by the President].'' According to the Washington Post, 
``Democrats hope to use the votes . . . as fodder . . . in hopes of 
staving off potential losses in several states.''
  Look, it doesn't get any more cynical than that--to demonstrate such 
a total lack of seriousness in such troubling times for the middle 
class.
  At this point Washington Democrats are in the sixth year of trying to 
fix the economy, and the middle class continues to suffer. It is just 
not working.
  As I have been saying for months now, this presents Washington 
Democrats with a choice. One option they have is to try something 
different. This means coming to the middle and working with us on 
bipartisan solutions that can create jobs, increase take-home pay, and 
give a leg up to the middle class. The other option is to double down 
on failed ideology and political gimmicks--the kinds of things that get 
the Democrats' leftwing base all excited.

[[Page 5009]]

  In short, Washington Democrats have a choice between helping the 
middle class and pleasing the left. So when they release a poll-tested, 
campaign-crafted ObamaCare distraction ``agenda'' packed to the brim 
with ``lefty show votes,'' I think middle-class families can tell whose 
side Washington Democrats are really on. It is certainly not their 
side.
  The people we represent all deserve better than this. They are 
hurting, really hurting, and all Washington Democrats seem to have for 
them is a bunch of show votes. I mean, how will show votes help our 
constituents? How will they help the people who have been writing to me 
about the impact of ObamaCare on themselves and their families?
  One woman who wrote me from Louisville had been enrolled in 
Kentucky's high-risk pool for people with preexisting conditions. She 
said she had been battling cancer for years and that in 2012 her cancer 
metastasized and moved into her liver, pelvis, lung, and diaphragm. 
Just imagine hearing devastating news like that. Now imagine hearing a 
year or so later that you are going to lose the insurance you liked 
too, insurance that had helped you manage your cancer treatment, and, 
worse, that your new ObamaCare plan was going to classify your chemo 
medicine as a specialty drug that costs more than $1,000 for a 3-week 
supply. ObamaCare, this constituent wrote, ``is about as helpful in 
saving my life as a wet paper sack to help cover me from the rain.''
  I would note she contacted me because she wanted me to know that 
ObamaCare stories like hers are anything but ``lies,'' despite what 
some in this Chamber might imply.
  Does anyone really think constituents like her care about some show 
vote? No. What she needs is relief from ObamaCare.
  So does another Kentuckian, who wrote me from Henderson County, whose 
premium will jump $400 a month to over $1,100 a month under ObamaCare. 
He wrote:

       Americans were told that we could . . . keep our existing 
     policy [if we chose]. . . . Not only was [this] a lie--[it's] 
     a lie that will cost me an additional $700 per month!

  How is a political show vote going to help him? Of course it isn't. 
And there is not a thing the Democratic Party's ``political arm'' can 
do to fix these problems.
  Kentuckians and countless Americans suffering under ObamaCare need 
real solutions--not gimmicks, not base-pleasing ideology. Solutions are 
what is needed. Look, Washington Democrats forced America's middle 
class into this impossible situation. They basically blocked every 
reasonable attempt to reform this law or to change it in any meaningful 
way. Yet now ObamaCare is becoming politically difficult for them. They 
are deflecting blame. Just this morning we saw several imperiled Obama 
Democrats spin an op-ed that underscores the point, but Americans are 
not going to be fooled by any of this. Americans agree it is time for 
Washington Democrats to work with us to remedy the mess they created, 
and that means repealing this law and replacing it with real reform.
  It is time for them to work with us on a real jobs agenda too, and to 
take up the numerous bills the House has already sent over and get them 
onto the President's desk.
  Americans are fed up with the games and the tricks. They want serious 
solutions. They don't need a campaign poster to figure that out, and 
Republicans believe it is about time the American people got those 
solutions.


                 Remembering sergeant Michael C. Cable

  Mr. President, I want to pay tribute to a Kentucky soldier who 
tragically has been lost while serving his country. SGT Michael C. 
Cable of Philpot, KY, was killed by the enemy while guarding American 
and Afghan officials in Afghanistan on March 27, 2013, exactly 1 year 
ago today. He was 26 years old.
  For his service in uniform, Sergeant Cable received several awards, 
medals, and decorations, including the Bronze Star Medal, the Purple 
Heart, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Good Conduct Medal, the 
National Defense Service Medal, the Afghanistan Campaign Medal with 
Bronze Service Star, the Iraq Campaign Medal with Bronze Service Star, 
the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, the Noncommissioned Officers 
Professional Development Ribbon, the Army Service Ribbon, the Overseas 
Service Ribbon, the NATO Medal, the Combat Action Badge, and the Air 
Assault Badge.
  A decade ago as a high school student, Michael was a star on the 
Daviess County High School cross-country team, and they won many races. 
``I sent out an e-mail this morning with this Bible verse,'' says Tony 
Rowe, Michael's former high school coach.

       ``Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down 
     his life for his friends.'' He is a hero. He died fighting 
     for us and trying to make life better for the people of 
     Afghanistan.

  What Tony Rowe says about Michael is absolutely true, and in fact the 
most important thing that Michael's family wants the world to 
understand is that Michael was performing a mission at the time he was 
attacked, and this important mission was protecting others. It was not 
only highly important work but highly dangerous.
  Before leaving on his final deployment, Michael pulled his family 
members aside to warn them his mission would be dangerous. ``He was 
prepared before he left for anything that happened,'' said Raymond 
Johnston, Michael's older brother. In that conversation Michael 
described his sisters and a close family friend as the most important 
people in his life, and he asked his family to take care of them if 
anything happened to him.
  It is very hard. He was my little buddy. He wanted to make sure that 
no matter what, we continued to enjoy life. And we are trying to do 
that.
  Michael's tragic loss was the first combat death for the 101st 
Airborne Division, based in Fort Campbell, KY, for that deployment to 
Afghanistan. He joined the Army in August 2007 and arrived at Fort 
Campbell in December of 2010. He served as a fire support specialist.
  In his family Michael was known as a prankster. His last big prank 
was pulled on his younger sister Idalis. Michael promised he would buy 
Idalis a car. He had his older sister Wendy tell Idalis that Michael 
was determined to make good on his word but that he had bought her a 
really old and ugly car. Wendy told Idalis she would have to act 
excited so as not to hurt Michael's feelings. Far from a beat-up 
clunker, Michael gave his sister his own Jeep Cherokee just before he 
deployed to Afghanistan.
  Michael loved sports of all kinds. He played golf to relax and won a 
golf tournament at Fort Campbell. His favorite professional sports team 
was the Green Bay Packers.
  Michael had planned to leave the Army after his tour in Afghanistan 
to open his own home remodeling business. His family remembers Michael 
as always busy spending time with friends.
  We are thinking about Michael's family today, including his parents, 
Vickie and Raymond Johnston, his siblings Raymond, Lisa, Wendy, 
Kennedy, and Idalis, and many other beloved family members and friends.
  I would like the family of SGT Michael C. Cable to know this Senate 
recognizes that Sergeant Cable was doing his job, and we are filled 
with gratitude. Without the men and women brave enough to wear our 
country's uniform and do the jobs our country asks them to do, I fear 
for what would become of our Nation.
  I know my colleagues join me in honoring Sergeant Cable for his life 
of service and for his tragic sacrifice, and I extend my deepest 
condolences to Michael's family for their loss 1 year ago today.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.


                       Reservation of Leader Time

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
leadership time is reserved.

                          ____________________