[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 3]
[Senate]
[Page 3045]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        THIS WEEK IN THE SENATE

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, this week promises to be a busy one. 
Just across the street, an important ObamaCare case will be argued 
before the Supreme Court, and tomorrow, here in the Capitol, Israeli 
Prime Minister Netanyahu will address a joint session of Congress. It 
is an important speech that comes at a very important time. Iran's 
longstanding determination to develop nuclear capabilities poses a 
threat to Israel, America, and the world. It is a threat Netanyahu is 
singularly capable of explaining at such a critical moment in U.S.-
Israeli relations.
  Meanwhile, the new Senate will continue to pursue good ideas for the 
middle class. On the floor and in committee, both this week and in the 
weeks to come, we expect to see more bipartisan action on behalf of the 
American people on a range of issues, from human trafficking to the 
NLRB. For instance, we will offer Senators a chance to stand tall for 
basic fairness in the workplace by overturning the administration's 
ambush rule, which seeks to weaken workers' rights, and we will keep up 
the fight for sensible, bipartisan ideas such as the Keystone jobs 
bill.
  This positive approach stands in stark contrast to the partisan 
posture we have seen from our friends on the other side of the aisle.
  The President's veto of the bipartisan Keystone bill represents a 
victory for partisanship and for powerful special interests. The 
President's veto of the bipartisan Keystone bill represents a defeat 
for jobs, for infrastructure, and for the middle class. That is why 
Congress needs to try and overturn it.
  We had hoped to have that vote tomorrow, but for some reason 
Democrats are actually filibustering that vote. It takes 67 votes to 
overcome a veto, more than the 60 required to overcome a filibuster. So 
there is no reason for a filibuster, other than to cause delay and 
gridlock simply for its own sake.
  It is certainly disappointing. But the new Congress won't be deterred 
from fighting for jobs and the middle class. We will keep fighting for 
this good idea, and we will keep fighting for other good ideas.
  We will also keep up our fight to fund the Department of Homeland 
Security. The people watched Democrats filibuster Homeland Security 
funding for weeks. On Friday they watched Democrats--including many who 
implied they would actually do something about the President's 
overreach--filibuster a commonsense bill from Senator Collins. Now 
Americans are learning that Democrats might even try and prevent the 
Senate and the House of Representatives from reconciling their bills to 
get the Department funded. It just doesn't make any sense, especially 
when we consider the words of the minority leader himself. He said that 
going to conference ``has been the custom in the Senate and the House
of Representatives for more than 200 years.'' At 5:30 p.m. we will have 
a vote to do just that. We invite the minority leader and his party to 
join us in supporting this effort to go to conference.
  It is interesting to see the distance between rhetoric and reality 
with some of our good friends on the other side--not just on 
conferencing bills, not just on addressing the President's overreach, 
but also with the use of the filibuster itself. Some of the folks who 
are now filibustering simply for the sake of delaying and causing 
gridlock are the same folks who used to denounce the use of the 
filibuster. It is easy to see that they really weren't very serious.
  The truth is that a better way is possible for our colleagues. I 
invite our Democratic friends to drop all the negativity, drop all the 
gridlock, and join Republicans in advancing a positive agenda for the 
American people instead.

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