[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 6]
[House]
[Pages 8972-8975]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                     ADDRESSING SENATORS' COMMENTS

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Valadao). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 3, 2013, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Iowa 
(Mr. King) for 30 minutes.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, it is my honor and privilege to 
address you here on the floor of the United States House of 
Representatives, and I come to the floor this afternoon, Mr. Speaker, 
to address you and bring up the topic of the dialogue that has been--I 
will say flowing forth on the floor of the United States Senate over 
the last few weeks.
  As I listened to that dialogue and listened to the way they have 
taken Saul Alinsky's ``Rules for Radicals'' and decided that they are 
going to implement them and deploy them on the floor of the United 
States Senate, it occurs to me that when, out of the mouths of people 
like Senator Schumer and Senator Reid and Senator Durbin come these 
allegations--and sometimes allegations that name and target Members of 
the House of Representatives, it occurs to me that, when I came to this 
Congress, Mr. Speaker, in 2003, there was a rule that existed here that 
prevented a Member of the House of Representatives from naming a United 
States Senator here on the floor.
  It was kind of a shield of protectionism, so that the Senators could 
not be directly criticized in the dialogue that we have here on the 
floor.
  My good friend and then-Member of Congress, Tom Feeney from Florida, 
read through the rules, as a good, honest lawyer, newly elected to the 
United States Congress would, and he saw that rule and wondered: Why 
can't we utter the name of a United States Senator on the floor of the 
House of Representatives?
  He could come up with no reason why we shouldn't be able to do that, 
and so he brought an amendment to the rules that struck that 
prohibition, and thereafter, thanks to then-Congressman Tom Feeney of 
Orlando, the rule is gone. It was amended, and that is a good thing 
because, now, I can actually name the people who are attacking me on 
the floor of the United States Senate, and let you know, Mr. Speaker, 
what is going on in that other body, that body that constantly calls 
for bipartisan work and bipartisan cooperation.
  This is what I get from Senator Chuck Schumer, New York, May 1, 2014, 
on the floor of the United States Senate. He decided he would target me 
and blame me for the things that he believes are failures of the entire 
House of Representatives.
  Here are some of the quotes that Chuck Schumer uttered on that day of 
May 1 from the floor of the United States Senate. He called me ``an 
extreme outlier on the issue of immigration reform.''
  I would direct Chuck Schumer to the Republican Party platform. You 
will find there language in the Republican Party platform that supports 
the position I have long held on immigration, and that position that I 
hold is this: We need to respect the rule of law. We need to secure our 
borders. We need to have an immigration policy that is designed to 
enhance the economic, the social, and the cultural well-being of the 
United States of America.
  It can't be for the Democratic Party of the United States of America 
because they are so closely aligned--in fact, they have enveloped the 
entire Progressive Party. The Progressive Party comes to this floor on 
a regular basis and gives speeches and presents their position.
  Their position, at one time, could be found on the Democratic 
Socialists of America Web site, dsausa.org. There, socialism is 
celebrated. As Progressives celebrate socialism, they are wrapped up 
inside the Democratic Party.
  We don't adhere to that on my side. We adhere to the rule of law and 
the Constitution, a secure border, a sovereign United States of 
America, and a policy for immigration that is designed to enhance the 
economic, social, and cultural well-being of the United States of 
America.
  We have enough common sense, Mr. Speaker, to know that our country is 
limited in size and scope. It is a large country, but we cannot be the 
relief valve for all of the poverty in the world.
  There are 7 billion people on the planet, and if they all have good 
sense, they would all want to live here. We need some of them in those 
countries to rebuild those countries and establish American principles, 
so that they can enjoy the prosperity that we enjoy, reconstructed 
around first principles, in the other countries of the world.

                              {time}  1400

  We need to lead the world. We don't need to necessarily bring all the 
world here to feed the world here in the United States. And so, an 
extreme outlier, not so. Chuck Schumer represents the extreme outliers, 
and they are socialists, Marxists, progressives, liberal Democrats. I 
am sure that one of those labels will be one that he has already 
embraced, Mr. Speaker.
  Second quote, Senator Chuck Schumer of me, Steve King:

       The rhetoric of Steve King is beyond the pale. I am certain 
     that the majority of Republicans in the House have their 
     stomachs churn when they see Steve King spew that kind of 
     rhetoric.

  That is not exactly collegial dialogue, Mr. Speaker, to see that kind 
of thing. What I wonder is why would Chuck Schumer think that he would 
know when the stomachs of Republicans might churn. I think they might 
churn when they hear him say those things. Although, rest easy, Mr. 
Speaker, mine doesn't.
  I take this all with good humor because I understand that it is a 
tactic. It is an Alinsky tactic, and it is designed to bring out a 
goal. It is not necessarily to raise me up to the point where he 
assigns me with the full sense of responsibility and authority to 
determine immigration policy here in the House of Representatives. Oh, 
I wish it were so, Mr. Speaker. I don't believe it is so. Yes, there is 
some influence there. History will decide how much--not me, not Chuck 
Schumer.
  Here is his goal: I believe that Senator Schumer has concluded that 
he could taunt the leadership and the House of Representatives, and 
that includes our Speaker of the House, into bringing amnesty 
legislation to the floor of the House because, if it does and if it 
should pass, the Senate would conform with any amnesty legislation 
because they are controlled by Democrats.
  I have long known and long been restrained by people in my own party,

[[Page 8973]]

Mr. Speaker, from laying out the argument as to why almost every 
Democrat I know wants open borders and amnesty and a never-ending 
supply of illegal aliens in the United States of America.
  It is a pretty easy formula to figure out, especially if you sit here 
for 10 or a dozen years engaged in hearings and debate on a weekly 
basis, you begin to hear the thread of their conversation and you begin 
to understand the real truth behind their motives. It works out to be 
this:
  Of course there are a large number of illegal immigrants in the 
United States. We have been using the number 11 million since we 
stopped using the number 12 million, but they didn't stop coming into 
America. I don't quite understand why we would think that there are 
fewer illegal aliens in America today than there were 10 years ago. I 
believe there are more.
  If they come across the border at the rates that the witnesses from 
the Border Patrol and other witnesses in the hearings have been 
testifying, they will say that they will stop perhaps 25 percent that 
try. When I go down to the border and ask them, they will say, well, 10 
percent has to come first. It is probably not 10. Some will say, with a 
little smirk, 3 percent is maybe what we stop.
  If I take the 25 percent, 25 percent effectiveness on our border and 
you look at those whom they do interdict on the border and you do the 
calculation, that turns out to be a number that is equivalent to 11,000 
a night--on average, 11,000 a night coming across our southern border. 
That would be at some of the peak levels that we have, Mr. Speaker. I 
would think it is more objective for us to dial that number back down 
to somewhere in the neighborhood of about half of that. So half of 
11,000, 5,500 a night is pretty close to the last reliable information 
that I found on how many are coming across our border illegally.
  Well, so I asked this question: What was the size of Santa Anna's 
army? About that, about 5,500 or 6,000. So it gives you a sense, the 
size of Santa Anna's army coming across our southern border every 
night, on average. I don't say day and night. Most of it is at night. I 
have sat down on the border at night multiple times. I have traveled 
the border and done multiple trips down there to monitor what is going 
on on our southern border. It has gotten a little better in Arizona, 
and it has gotten worse in Texas.
  We don't have control of this border, but that doesn't trouble most 
Democrats, because they recognize that the millions of people that are 
coming into this country illegally are counted in the census. And so, 
if you would go to a district in California like Maxine Waters' 
district, she only needs about 40,000 to 50,000 votes in her district 
to get reelected to the United States Congress. If you go to my 
district, it is well over 120,000 votes for me to be reelected to the 
United States Congress. The difference in that is two things. One is I 
have a very, very high percentage of real American citizens that do 
vote in my district; she has a lower percentage. And I have a higher 
turnout of people who are responsible enough to vote; she has a lower 
percentage.
  Illegal aliens are counted in the census all over America, and when 
new district lines are drawn, those district lines treat people the 
same as citizens. The Constitution doesn't say count the citizens and 
then reapportion; it says count the people.
  And so Democrats are happy enough to see the country filling up with 
people that they get to count when they do a district, because they get 
a Democrat district that is another vote here in the House of 
Representatives, Mr. Speaker. They want to turn this country into a 
single-party country.
  When you think of what happened in California, they are trying to 
bring about the same kind of transition in Texas. If they can turn 
Texas from a red State into a blue State, there will never be another 
conservative elected to a national office in this country again. They 
know that. That is why they have thousands of their operatives working 
in Texas, trying to turn Texas over into a blue State.
  They know that illegal immigration is an essential key. Back in 2007 
or so when they bussed in tens of thousands of demonstrators, many of 
them self-professed illegal aliens in America, many of them wearing 
identical T-shirts that were issued to them apparently on the bus, 
then-alive Senator Teddy Kennedy stepped out to the west lawn of the 
Capitol and stepped up to the microphone and, through an interpreter, 
said to that group of people, who was interpreting to them in Spanish, 
he said:

       Some say, report to be deported; I say, report to become an 
     American citizen.

  That was the Democrats' clarion call, the call out to illegal aliens 
in America to migrate toward the Democrat Party, to those that are 
outside of America to come into America and migrate towards the 
Democrat Party. They operate in those neighborhoods doing voter 
registration drives and signups and organizations, a lot of it funded 
by Federal dollars that matriculates down into their organizations. 
They do know what they are doing. They have built a cultural edifice 
around much of the minority community in America, and much of it has 
been because, Mr. Speaker, they have been telling them lies. They have 
been telling them lies about the political opponents of the leftists 
that are engaged in those neighborhoods; and we have seen this flow, 
Mr. Speaker, as far as the White House.
  The divisions that have been driven between Americans, divisions 
driven down the line of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, 
national origin, prosperity, those wedges have been driven in a 
calculated way for the political gain of the people that sit over on 
this side of this Chamber. I have seen too much of it to believe that I 
could be off by 1 degree in the statement that I have made, Mr. 
Speaker.
  I am continuing onward, Senator Schumer of myself:

       Steve King, a far right, way out of the mainstream outlier 
     doesn't just spew hatred; he calls the shots.

  Hmm, I don't think that he could point to any hatred that I have 
spoken to and identified as spewing. Calling the shots? No, I hear the 
wisdom of the Republican Conference. I have to hear what they say and 
what they think and where they anchor their thoughts. We have coalesced 
on this, Mr. Speaker: whatever we might do to change immigration law, 
we can't trust the President of the United States to enforce anything 
he doesn't like. It doesn't just have to be immigration law; it can be 
anything.
  The President of the United States picks and chooses the laws that he 
will enforce. He essentially tells us: I am not going to enforce this 
series of laws because I don't like them, and I am not going to enforce 
these series of laws because I don't like them. It is not just 
immigration; although, that was some of the first examples and some of 
the most egregious examples, Mr. Speaker.
  And we saw them come through as the Morton memos, and I will circle 
back to that in a moment. We saw the President, by executive edict, not 
always in executive order, sometimes a third-tier notice on a Web site 
of the United States Treasury, sometimes a verbal statement that he 
makes before a press conference in the Rose Garden at noon on a Friday. 
The President of the United States will step up and say, for example, 
when he was speaking to the churches who objected to their religious 
freedom being taken from them, their conscience protection that was to 
be assured to them, written into the ObamaCare law, after they took 
that religious freedom, conscience protection away from our people of 
faith, and in particular the Catholic churches that filed multiple 
lawsuits, and other religious organizations did the same, the President 
was taking 2 weeks of heat and criticism as the faith communities rose 
up, and he decided to put an end to that. So he held a press conference 
at the White House at noon on a Friday, and with the Presidential seal 
in front of the podium, he stood there and said: I am going to make an 
accommodation to the religious organizations in America, and now I am 
going to require the insurance companies to provide these things for 
free.
  Well, these things were contraceptives, abortifacients, and 
sterilizations.

[[Page 8974]]

Contraceptives, Mr. Speaker, we understand what they are. 
Abortifacients are pills that bring about the abortion of a little, 
innocent, unborn baby. Sterilizations are those things that might come 
with tubal ligations or vasectomies. Those were the things that were in 
ObamaCare that are particularly egregious to the principles of the 
Catholic church.
  And so the President decided he would make an accommodation written 
in the rules, by the way--not the bill, but in the rules. The President 
said: I am going to make an accommodation to the religious 
organizations, and now I am going to require the insurance companies to 
provide these things for free. He repeated himself. He said: Provide 
these things for free. For free.
  I thought, hmm, how is it that the President can step up and give a 
press conference and change a law or change a rule that has been 
published by Kathleen Sebelius' Health and Human Services? How does the 
President have the authority to simply speak and make those changes? 
Surely there must be a rule that is amended. Surely there must be a 
bill that has been introduced that has a lot of responsible cosponsors, 
that has a prospect of being passed. Maybe he has got an agreement with 
our Speaker and majority leader here and Harry Reid over in the Senate.
  So we went back and scoured the rule, Mr. Speaker. The rule didn't 
change, not one i dotted differently, not one t crossed differently. 
There was no change in any written document, the written document that 
required the religious organizations to provide contraceptives, 
abortifacients, and sterilizations.
  The President said now the insurance companies have to do this for 
free. Not one word changed in print anywhere. The insurance companies 
stepped up to that verbal directive from the President of the United 
States. That should be appalling to any American citizen that took an 
eighth grade civics course to understand that the President doesn't 
write the laws. The President doesn't have the authority to change 
them. Congress has granted to the executive branch the authority to 
write rules, an Administrative Procedure Act that directs how those 
rules that are proposed by the executive branch are published for open 
public hearing. There is a process they must go through.
  The President is not the king. The President doesn't get to issue 
edicts verbally from the podium and have the force and effect of law to 
change that policy without any print being changed anywhere in a rule 
or in the Federal Register or in the Federal Code. That is what he did 
with that particular case, Mr. Speaker. I use that as an example to 
tell you how far this President has overreached from his constitutional 
authority.
  So the President has first imposed contraceptives, abortifacients, 
and sterilizations on our religious organizations, then lifted the 
imposition verbally by telling the insurance companies: Now you are 
going to have to do this for free. What did they do? They complied. 
They listened to the President's press conference and decided, okay, we 
are going to do what he tells us. They didn't go back and check the 
text--well, maybe the text of the press conference, maybe the text of 
his speech, but there was no rule. There was no law.
  The President also suspended welfare-to-work. The temporary 
assistance to needy families was written that required welfare-to-work. 
It was written so that then Bill Clinton couldn't circumvent it. It was 
written tightly and with the idea that a President would stretch it. 
What happens? This President simply suspended welfare-to-work under 
TANF.
  What else happened? How about President Bush's No Child Left Behind 
on education?

                              {time}  1415

  President Obama has now issued so many waivers that No Child Left 
Behind no longer exists. These were acts of the United States Congress 
nullified by executive acts of the President of the United States.
  We will accept it if the court over across the street will nullify a 
law that is passed by the Congress and signed by the President, if they 
rule it unconstitutional. Most of the time we accept that. Sometimes we 
reject their judgment because we take an oath to the Constitution too, 
Mr. Speaker.
  But we should be appalled at the constitutional violations of the 
President of the United States, who has continually overreached on 
immigration, on education, on welfare-to-work, on ObamaCare itself: the 
bill with his name and his signature. There are more than 30 changes 
that the President has brought about on that. Some of them are clearly 
unconstitutional. Most of them are difficult to litigate to a 
successful conclusion.
  Who calls the shots here? Well, I make recommendations like anybody 
else does. Each Member follows their own conscience. It is nice to get 
the assignment--Senator Schumer, he says: They listen to me. Well, yes, 
and we listen to each other.
  Here is another quote from Senator Schumer. He said that I am 
winning:

       Steve King has three wins, the rest of the Republican Party 
     and the rest of America is winless. Good for him, terrible 
     for us. King is in the driver's seat of immigration reform 
     and as long as he sits there, things will continue to be 
     stuck in a rut.

  Stuck in a rut, in the driver's seat, the rest of America is winless. 
No, the rest of America is winning each day that we can protect the 
rule of law, each day that we have something left that we can use to 
secure our borders, each day that we can deploy some type of law 
enforcement at the local government, State government, and the Federal 
Government too, out on the streets of America, that at least slows down 
this influx of illegal immigration that we have.
  America is not winless when that happens. America would be wiped out 
from a perspective of the rule of law and the future and the destiny 
for our country if we allowed people like Chuck Schumer, Harry Reid, 
and Dick Durbin to set the policy for immigration. If they did that, 
the rule of law, at least with regard to immigration, would be 
destroyed, be gone. We couldn't reconstruct it again in our lifetime. 
Not just our lifetime, Mr. Speaker, but the lifetime of this Republic.
  I would ask this question, Mr. Speaker: Has anybody read the Senate 
Gang of Eight immigration bill? I have. I have read through that entire 
bill, and I come to this conclusion. They have sent to us from the 
United States Senate a bill on immigration. It is expansive. It covers 
all kinds of things. But it is this: it is instantaneous amnesty for 
almost everybody that is in America illegally, instantaneous amnesty. 
It is prospective amnesty to the extent that it does not address how we 
might address people who get into America after the bill might be 
enacted. So the prospects are that it would be the next wave of those 
who would be, according to their description, living in the shadows.
  So if we are not going to enforce the law in the future or if we are 
going to pass a Senate version of the bill--and we are not, but the 
Senate version of the bill, if it becomes law, doesn't do anything to 
bring about enforcement for those who would violate our immigration 
laws in the future, nothing. It may do something on the border. A $40 
billion Corker amendment blows the budget substantially without a 
guarantee that it is going to be functional. But is instantaneous 
amnesty for those that are here. It is prospective amnesty for those 
who would come here. And, Mr. Speaker, it is retroactive amnesty. And 
that means it goes back to those who have been deported in the past and 
says: We really didn't mean it. Why don't you apply to come back to 
America, you all come back now, you hear, because we really can't have 
deported you in the past and let people stay in America under the same 
conditions that we deported you in the past. That is the Senate version 
of the bill. It is ludicrous from a commonsense heart of the heartland 
middle America viewpoint, where we respect and love the rule of law.
  So Mr. Schumer, Senator Schumer, went on: He called for my expulsion 
from the Republican Party. I am pretty

[[Page 8975]]

sure they are not going to listen to Chuck Schumer on that. He says:

       They can show some courage and say that the Steve Kings in 
     the world can say whatever they want, but they have no place 
     in a modern Republican Party.

  Imagine a leftist activist, deploying Alinsky tactics on the floor of 
the United States Senate, who would tell the Republican Party that they 
should expel me, who in a lot of ways has stood with the entire 
platform consistently for a long time. I would have to go change the 
platform first. It would be easier just to become a Democrat. However, 
their ranks are not swelling as fast as ours are. Commonsense is 
prevailing, and we are seeing Republican majorities in the States, a 
likely Republican majority expanded here in the House of 
Representatives, and a real good shot at a Republican majority in the 
United States Senate. What does that say about who is calling the shots 
in America? It is not Chuck Schumer, it is not Harry Reid, it is not 
Dick Durbin.
  So he continues. Two weeks later--he hadn't had enough--two weeks 
later he comes to the floor of the Senate again and goes through a 
series of some of the same things, which I will skip down through a 
little bit more quickly:

       Far-right extremists, such as Congressman Steve King.

  Another:

       What has the House actually done on immigration these past 
     2 years?

  This is Chuck Schumer:

       Nothing. Look it up. This is what Steve King wants, he 
     wants the House to do nothing. He is winning and America is 
     losing.

  Well, no, the House has done something. In the appropriations bill 
last year, June 6, 2013, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations 
bill, I brought an amendment, an amendment that shut off all funding to 
implement or enforce the President's unconstitutional actions and exert 
constitutional actions that had to do with DACA, the Deferred Action 
for Childhood Arrivals, and for prosecutorial discretion known as the 
Morton Memos.
  The President's action is unconstitutional. He has no prosecutorial 
discretion to identify classes or groups of people and then exempt them 
from the law. Prosecutorial discretion must be on an individual basis; 
it cannot be on a group. They violated that. They know it. I read their 
material and debated with them and initiated a lawsuit. We are somewhat 
sidetracked right now on that. It is the nature of the thing.
  My amendment passed this Congress 224 to 201. That is not nothing. 
That is restoring the rule of law and the Constitution immigration 
policy after it has been violated by the President of the United 
States. We sent that out of the House of Representatives, Mr. Speaker. 
We set it on Harry Reid's desk, and there it likely went into his 
drawer and he took no action on it. So it is not that the House isn't 
doing anything, it is that the Senate did something really illogical: 
the Gang of Eight's bill for instantaneous, perpetual, and retroactive 
amnesty.
  And then we have the number three-ranking Democrat in the Senate 
trying to taunt the Speaker of the House into doing something equally 
as foolish: bring amnesty to the floor of the House. This place would 
blow up and the American people would arrive here in short order 
because they love the rule of law. Not only natural born Americans, not 
only naturalized Americans, green card holders that come here to 
achieve the American Dream. That means from any country they came from 
and every country they came from, those who came here to love America 
and respect and appreciate the American Dream.
  But what is happening is it is being eroded by destruction of the 
rule of law for political motivation on the part of people like Barack 
Obama, Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer, and Dick Durbin.
  There is another quote here by Chuck Schumer that says:

       Enough is enough. We will not let our party be hijacked by 
     extremists whose xenophobia causes them to prefer maintaining 
     a broken system over achieving a tough, fair, and practical 
     long-term solution.

  Xenophobia. I had to look that up when we came to this Congress. We 
don't use that in the streets where I come from, but I have known its 
definition for a long time: being afraid of something that you don't 
know. Well, I don't often get accused of being afraid of anything, so 
when I am I pay a little bit of attention to that.
  I would say this. Chuck Schumer is not like me. I am not afraid of 
him so it is not xenophobia. Harry Reid is not like me. I am not afraid 
of Harry Reid, so that is not xenophobia. Dick Durbin is not like me. I 
am not afraid of him. That is not xenophobia. What xenophobia are they 
talking about, Mr. Speaker, is my question?
  So if we are going to have some kind of a challenge of rhetoric 
bouncing back and forth between the House and the Senate, let's do it 
face to face, let's do it eye to eye. Let's have that duel, not like 
Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton--I would be the one standing on the 
high ground on that--but let's do it like real men do it today, not 
dueling pistols at 50 paces, let's do this with microphones within 
arm's reach, Mr. Speaker. Maybe we could get to the bottom of this and 
we could determine who exactly had the xenophobia.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair would remind Members that while 
debate may include policy criticisms of the President and Members of 
the Senate, it is not in order to engage in personalities toward those 
parties.

                          ____________________