[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 9]
[Senate]
[Pages 13457-13459]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




    NOMINATION OF ROBERT ALAN McDONALD TO BE SECRETARY OF VETERANS 
                           AFFAIRS--Continued

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the time until 2:45 
p.m. will be equally divided in the usual form.
  The Senator from Washington.
  Mrs. MURRAY. Madam President, before I begin I do want to take a 
moment to commend the chairmen of the Veterans' Affairs Committees in 
both the House and the Senate for their commitment to reaching a deal 
that puts our veterans first and gives the VA the tools they need to 
address immediate challenges.
  More importantly, I really applaud their work to build and strengthen 
the VA system in order to continue to deliver the best care for our 
Nation's heroes over the long term.
  The deal they announced yesterday is a very important step toward 
addressing a lot of issues that we know exist within the VA system, but 
it cannot be the final step. As transparency and accountability 
increase at the VA, so will the investigations and reports of 
additional concerns, requiring even more action from the VA, from the 
administration, and from this Congress.
  However, as Chairman Miller said yesterday, we cannot legislate good 
character here in Congress. It is going to be up to the leadership at 
the Department of Veterans Affairs to truly enact those reforms.
  So I have come to the floor today in support of the nomination of 
Robert McDonald, someone I believe has the skills necessary to make 
these necessary changes as the next VA Secretary.
  As I told Mr. McDonald last week, he is faced with a truly monumental 
task. Even as we pass comprehensive legislation to bring significant 
reforms at the VA to reduce wait times, to improve accountability, 
there are still many serious challenges the VA must address.
  Twenty-two veterans still take their own lives each day. Thousands of 
veterans are alone, coping with sexual assaults. And while the 
Department has made commendable progress, it will be an uphill battle 
as we work to eliminate veterans homelessness and the claims backlog. 
Mr. McDonald will have to grapple with these and many more issues--all 
on day one.
  When I met with Mr. McDonald in my office a few weeks ago, he told me 
he was one of the veterans who was lost in the system during his 
transition from military life to civilian life. So I trust--I trust--he 
understands what a critical moment this is for the VA and why we must 
finally fix many of these systemic and cultural challenges.
  We have all made a promise to those who have signed up to serve. So I 
encourage my colleagues to support this nomination. I am hopeful the 
steps we are taking here this week on behalf of our Nation's heroes 
will finally ignite the much-delayed reforms our veterans have been 
demanding and they deserve.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina.
  Mr. BURR. Madam President, I stand today not to rehash with my 
colleagues the crisis that exists at the Veterans' Administration or to 
share it with the American people. They know the story, and especially 
our Nation's veterans, who have been given the runaround.
  I am here to highlight a success in the Senate. See, my colleagues, 
on July 7, 2014--not even a month ago--we received the nomination for 
the new VA Secretary from the President.
  On July 22 of this month, we had a confirmation hearing on that 
nomination. On July 23--the next day--Robert McDonald was passed 
unanimously out of the committee. Today--before the end of July--we are 
on the Senate floor to confirm Robert McDonald as the next VA 
Secretary.
  I rise to urge my colleagues to support this nomination. The VA needs 
a confirmed Secretary in place to begin a long, arduous process of 
reform and cultural change.
  By now, our colleagues probably know that Bob McDonald is a veteran

[[Page 13458]]

himself. He is a graduate of West Point. He served 5 years in active 
duty, and served most of that time at Fort Bragg, NC. So I consider him 
one of ours.
  He spent more than 30 years working for Procter & Gamble--I think the 
most competitive manufacturing company in the world. His work led him 
across the globe. But he also had prominent roles at a number of other 
organizations--Xerox, United States Steel Corporation, and the Business 
Roundtable.
  Mr. McDonald has frequently lectured to groups on leadership skills, 
and his leadership philosophy was highlighted in the book ``The 
Leader's Compass.'' He is the type of leader we need at the VA at this 
very crucial time.
  Bob McDonald clearly has the experience to run an organization as 
large and as diverse as the Department of Veterans Affairs. Perhaps 
more importantly, he has selflessly agreed to take the challenge of 
leading the VA at its most critical time--something many people might 
have passed on.
  I hope this week, in addition to this nomination, we will pass 
legislation to help the VA and its next leader address the systemic 
problems with access to VA health care and a corrosive culture that led 
to this crisis. But that legislation would be just one step. An 
enormous amount of work must be done from within the VA to rebuild its 
reputation and to turn it into an agency that will live up to the 
expectations of our veterans and a nation grateful to them for their 
service. We need a strong leader to do that, and I am glad Robert 
McDonald has agreed to serve his country once again in this important 
role.
  The nomination received the unanimous support of the Veterans' 
Affairs Committee. I urge my colleagues: Confirm Robert McDonald as the 
next Secretary of the VA, and let's get on with the important work of 
reform at that agency.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
  Mr. SHELBY. Madam President, my colleague from North Carolina has 
just spoken on behalf of the nomination of Robert McDonald to be the 
Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, and I will do 
likewise. He has also spoken of his background as a graduate of West 
Point, as an Army officer, and as the CEO of one of the largest 
companies in the world.
  I had the occasion to meet with Mr. McDonald, and he could be the man 
of the hour. I hope he will be. He looks that way now.
  With that in mind, I rise today in support of Robert McDonald's 
nomination for Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs. It is 
my hope that Robert McDonald will bring a renewed commitment, energy, 
and acumen to address the Department's systemic problems that we all 
know exist.
  The allegations against the Department of Veterans Affairs are 
incredibly serious. Therefore, I rise in defense of our Nation's 
veterans. Our veterans have put themselves in harm' way to defend us, 
and I think it is only right that we do everything in our power to 
defend them and their interests when they return home.
  Allegations that veterans were not only denied timely access to care 
but that scheduling delays, secret waiting lists, and lost records may 
have led to veterans' deaths are totally unacceptable. These 
allegations of mismanagement and cover-up at the Veterans' 
Administration are beyond disturbing; they are sickening, they need to 
be corrected, and they need to be corrected immediately.
  Our veterans deserve better. Our veterans have earned these benefits 
through their dedicated service and sacrifice to our Nation, and the VA 
must correct these problems, not just study them. It is my hope that 
Robert McDonald will actively work to address these tremendous 
challenges.
  But according to the VA's recent nationwide audit, new patients using 
the Central Alabama Veterans Health Care System waited an average of 
over 74 days to see a primary care doctor. That is totally 
unacceptable. That is nearly three times greater than the national 
average of 27 days for new patient wait times. I look forward to 
working with the new VA Secretary to review the Department's plan to 
initiate corrective action, both in Alabama and across the Nation.
  While the VA's wait time statistics are certainly disturbing to all 
of us, the problem does not end there. Allegations that VA employees 
may have submitted false records to justify their own receipt of 
performance bonuses suggest the possibility that the deceit and 
mistreatment I have described may also have been compounded by a lot of 
fraud.
  In May, Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski and I 
wrote a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder and called on the 
Department of Justice to begin appropriate criminal and civil 
investigations into allegations of misconduct at the Veterans' 
Administration. We have also recommended that the Commerce-Justice-
Science appropriations bill--and we serve as the chair and ranking 
member of that committee--provide the resources for these 
investigations. The Veterans Affairs and Military Construction 
appropriations bill provides an additional $5 million to investigate VA 
scheduling practices. And legislation introduced this week requests an 
additional $17 billion to improve the VA over the next 3 years.
  While I commend these efforts to initiate corrective action, I 
believe it is only a starting point. A lack of funding is not the 
mainspring of the VA's troubled past. I look forward to working with 
the Presiding Officer and others--with the new VA Secretary--to ensure 
these problems at the VA are rectified as soon as possible before any 
more veterans are adversely affected.
  Solving the issues at the VA has never been more imperative than it 
is today, as American service members continue to risk their lives 
every day for our Nation. Support for our Armed Forces must never 
waiver, and it must be just as strong when they return home. Who will 
fight our wars in the future if we do not prove that we respect our 
veterans today?
  Veterans have risked their lives for the freedoms we all enjoy and 
thus should receive the care they most assuredly deserve and have 
earned. Defending veterans' access to timely medical care today is the 
very least, I believe, we can do because they defended us first.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.


                                 Israel

  Mr. NELSON. Madam President, a part of the appropriations 
supplemental bill we will consider tomorrow is approximately $245 
million--I think I have that figure right--for the additional 
assistance to the Israeli Government for the Iron Dome system.
  The United States has been assisting Israel in order to be able to 
buy this system. To the credit of the scientists and the military 
planners in Israel, they developed this system, and it is a very 
sophisticated system. As a matter of fact, when you watch the rockets 
go off, you will see an incoming round coming, in this case from Gaza, 
often without any precision guidance.
  That is an interesting thing, that they are shooting at urbanized 
areas where the general civilian population is, and they have incoming 
rounds that no one knows where they are going; thus, the need for a 
sophisticated radar that can track it and distinguish first if it is 
going to fall in an area where there is nobody, where there is nothing 
in the way of equipment that would be harmed and, therefore, save the 
ordnance that otherwise would be shot. But the radar is so 
sophisticated that within seconds and fractions of seconds it can 
determine that, and then shoot off the round that will intercept the 
incoming round.
  It is a sight to behold to see this Iron Dome rocket go upward and 
then change its trajectory, almost at a 90-degree angle, to home in on 
the incoming warhead, and they have a 90-percent success rate.
  When this system was first produced, it was so successful that the 
Israeli people, who had been bombed from outside their territory and 
had been accustomed to running to bunkers, to shelters, to places where 
they could be

[[Page 13459]]

safe, with the institution of Iron Dome, often would come outside and 
see this aerial fireworks display because it had such a tremendous 
success rate.
  Now things have changed because in the latest conflict with Hamas--
and this is just in the course of the last 3 or so weeks--over 2,300 
rockets have been fired into Israel. Hamas continues to fire more 
rockets.
  Each night, if you turn on your television news shows, you see 
another display of all of this going on over on that side of the 
planet. Thus the need to supply more of the Iron Dome system and the 
ordnance that goes with it. And thus there will be this item that will 
be part of the supplemental appropriations request. I commend it to our 
colleagues to vote for it. It is a system that consistently the U.S. 
has helped to fund. It has saved a lot of lives.
  Remember, the ordnance that is being shot into Israel is usually not 
a guided system. That is part of the terror that is being aimed at 
Israel, because it is to inflict casualties upon a civilian population. 
Yet, with this sophisticated system, 90-percent effective, it is saving 
a lot of lives. That is what I wanted to share with the Senate.
  I yield the floor, and I ask unanimous consent that the time during 
quorum calls be charged against both sides.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. NELSON. 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. BOOKER. 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. BOOKER. Madam President, I rise today filled with anguish and 
heartbreak that is shared by so many Americans who have been watching 
over the past week as countless innocent children and innocent 
civilians have been killed and live in states of great fear or even 
terror. Millions are running for bomb shelters time and time again. We 
are seeing people in Gaza killed or maimed and seeing people in Israel 
live under the terror in the sky and terror coming from below.
  I want to stand resolute and clear about the true cause of this 
crisis. That lies squarely with Hamas, a terrorist organization whose 
ends do not start and finish with the well-being of the Palestinian 
people. Their primary focus and their clear agenda is not peace for 
their people. Written into their very charter is the firm determination 
to eliminate the State of Israel. They have proven this evil 
determination to do everything necessary to achieve their goal. They 
are willing to kill Israelis. They are willing to kill Americans. They 
have killed them both. Even worse, they are willing to put innocent 
Palestinians in harm's way, causing death and destruction within their 
own communities, to their own children, to their hospitals and to their 
schools.
  They are in the interests of wracking up casualties to add what they 
consider, in a warped way, moral force for their terrorist aim. I 
believe clearly in the evidence that this terrorist organization is 
willing to stop at no end in order to build their tunnels and to 
advocate and advance their independence.
  They are willing to deny their people food. They are willing to deny 
their people construction materials that could be building schools and 
building infrastructure. They are willing to deny medical supplies. 
They are willing to deny a higher standard of living in order to 
support clearly terrorist activities.
  This is unacceptable. This is unacceptable. This is unacceptable. We 
as Americans cannot advocate for or in any way accept a false peace 
that will allow Hamas, a terrorist organization, to continue their 
effort to destroy the State of Israel. Hamas is not seeking peace. 
Hamas is not seeking the peaceful coexistence between two states. What 
they are simply doing is they are willing to cause death and 
destruction to destroy Israel. Hamas is not a democratically elected 
organization. They are a terrorist organization. They do not speak for 
the Palestinian people. Hamas speaks for Hamas.
  Their history of killing Americans and Israelis and putting countless 
of their own people in harm's way, causing their destruction and their 
denial of the basics, must be stopped. For the sake of the Palestinian 
people and for the sake of the Israeli people, we as a Nation cannot 
support any measure or any agenda that gives this terrorist 
organization harbor or support, that gives this terrorist organization 
any advantage in trying to achieve their end.
  We cannot in this Nation advocate for that kind of false peace that 
allows Hamas to go back to tunneling, to firing rockets, to hiding 
missiles in schools and in hospitals, and putting more innocent 
children in harm's way. We as Americans must advocate for a true peace 
where two sides clearly recognize the right for peaceful coexistence 
and where both sides pledge to a true cessation of aggression, not a 
peace that allows one side to go back to its evil end, to tunneling, to 
plotting, to preparing just for the next attack. We have seen this 
before in recent history. We cannot allow it again. Right now we are in 
a state of crisis. America's voice must be resolute.
  We stand with our allies. We stand with the democratic State of 
Israel. We stand against terrorism.
  This is why today I come before you in support of the $225 million in 
additional funding requested by the Department of Defense to ensure 
that the Iron Dome in Israel remains equipped to protect civilians from 
Hamas-fired rockets.
  Hamas has fired over 2,500 rockets at Israel over the past 3 weeks, 
while putting innocent Palestinians at risk to protect their stockpiles 
and their evil ends. Yesterday alone 51 rockets and mortar shells were 
fired at Israel.
  In this time of crisis, America must stand for a true peace for the 
Palestinian people and for the Israeli people. Now, as a terrorist 
organization has evil ends to destroy the State of Israel, we must 
stand with our ally. We must stand with the State of Israel. We must 
stand for peace. Therefore, I support this expenditure and continue a 
resolute, unwavering, and unequivocal support of the continuance of the 
State of Israel.

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