Floor Speeches

  April 7, 2011, 12:40 pm

Cantor: House sits until budget resolved

By Pete Kasperowicz

Majority Leader Cantor said the House would stay in session this weekend, if need be, to address the budget impasse.

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  April 7, 2011, 12:38 pm

Hoyer will vote against the one-week spending bill

By Pete Kasperowicz

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said he would vote against the Republican's proposed one-week spending bill when it comes up for a vote later on Thursday.

"I've said … that I would not vote for a third one, and I'm not going to vote for this one," Hoyer said. "It won't matter because it's dead anyway, and you all know it's dead."

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  April 7, 2011, 11:18 am

Boehner: No deal on numbers, no deal on policy

By Pete Kasperowicz

House Speaker John Boenher (R-Ohio) said on the House floor Thursday morning that there is no deal yet on budget numbers for FY 2011, even as he was preparing to resume talks at the White House at 1 p.m.

"Talks to resolve last year's budget are progressing, but there is no agreement yet," he said shortly after 11 a.m. "No agreement on numbers, and no agreement on the underlying policies that were passed by this chamber."

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  April 7, 2011, 10:46 am

House GOP, Dems point fingers ahead of funding-bill vote

By Pete Kasperowicz

Republicans accused the White House of a "lack of leadership"; Democrats said "take-no-prisoner" Tea Partiers are holding up a deal.

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  April 6, 2011, 3:43 pm

Three Democrats warn of expanded EPA regulations impact on jobs

By Pete Kasperowicz

While most Democrats on Wednesday opposed the GOP's bill to restrict the Environmental Protection Agency authorities, three Democrats spoke in favor of it on the House floor and said failure to rein in the EPA would hurt job creation in rural areas of the country.

The House was debating H.R. 910, which would prohibit the EPA's regulation of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) was the first Democrat to speak out in favor of the bill, and rejected the idea put forward by other Democrats that the bill should be called the "Dirty Air Act." He said letting one agency decide how to regulate GHG is putting too much authority into a single agency.

"No single government agency, however, is sufficiently positioned to tackle the complex solution that's required to address carbon emissions," he said. "The answer has to be multi-pronged."

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  April 6, 2011, 1:56 pm

House GOP, Dems spar over EPA's regulatory impact on companies

By Pete Kasperowicz

House Republicans on Wednesday said legislation limiting regulation on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is needed to prevent the Environmental Protection Agency from imposing de facto taxes on U.S. companies, while Democrats warned limiting the EPA would set back decades of progress on the environment.

The debate took place in the context of the rule for H.R. 910, the Energy Tax Prevention Act, which would prevent the EPA from regulating GHG. Republicans see this as a needed step given the EPA's effort to do through regulation what Democrats cannot pass through Congress, such as a cap-and-trade policy.

Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) said in his opening remarks in the debate that the Clean Air Act should not be used as a basis for EPA regulations on GHG and that only Congress should have this right. Sessions said GHG regulations would cost hundreds of billions of dollars in the coming years and for that reason, the bill would help save jobs.

"It's a jobs-protection bill," he said.

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  April 6, 2011, 12:30 pm

Rep. Jackson tries to adjourn House to prompt budget talks

By Pete Kasperowicz and Josiah Ryan

Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) on Wednesday put forward a motion to adjourn the House shortly after noon in order to force the two parties to negotiate a FY 2011 budget agreement. Jackson also protested a Republican proposal to pass a one-week spending measure that would cut $12 billion from the budget while funding Defense spending for the rest of the year.

“That’s no compromise,” he said. “For months, the Republicans have said that as we reduce spending, everyone has to take a haircut — including the Department of Defense. But now, the Republicans propose increasing military spending.”

Jackson cited a press report saying Republicans were cheering the prospects of a government shutdown.

“So if the Republicans won’t compromise at the negotiating table, maybe we should get everyone down here to the floor to talk things over,” he concluded. “Mr. Speaker, I move that the house do now adjourn.”

Jackson requested a recorded vote at about 12:30 p.m., but it failed 36-367. All 36 “yes” votes came from Democrats, and 141 Democrats voted with Republicans not to adjourn the House.

—This post was updated at 12:55 to reflect the vote results.

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  April 6, 2011, 11:32 am

Rep. Frank condemns Afghan murders, criticizes Karzai reaction

By Pete Kasperowicz

Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) on Wednesday said the murder of several United Nations workers by Afghan protesters is a far worse offense than the burning of a Quran in the United States, which prompted the attacks. He also criticized Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai's reaction to the Quran burning.

"There needs to be even greater condemnation of the notion that [the Quran burning] in any way justifies murder," Frank said on the House floor. "That includes a condemnation, in my judgment, of the president of Afghanistan, our increasingly unimpressive ally, Mr. Karzai, who I believe added to the furor there by insisting that the man who burned the Quran should have been prosecuted."

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  April 6, 2011, 10:45 am

Hoyer says GOP threatening government shutdown by failing to compromise

By Pete Kasperowicz

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) on Wednesday morning offered no clues that Republicans and Democrats are close to a budget deal, and instead said the Republicans' failure to compromise is raising the risk of a government shutdown.

"Rather than compromise with President Obama and the Democrats in the Senate and the House, Republicans are threatening once again to shut down government, as they did in 1995," Hoyer said on the House floor.

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  April 5, 2011, 4:33 pm

DC delegate: Congress has 'killed' with needle exchange prohibition

By Pete Kasperowicz

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) on Tuesday said the U.S. Congress has "killed" Washington DC residents over the past several years by not allowing them to pay for their own needle exchange programs.

"We have the highest AIDS rate in the United States only because the Congress of the United States has killed -- I used these words advisedly -- killed men, women and children in the District of Columbia by keeping the District for ten years from using needle exchange so that AIDS would spread throughout the city," she said on the House floor. 

The GOP-led House earlier this year approved a bill preventing the needle exchange.

She added that DC has higher AIDS rates than other major U.S. cities "because of the wishes of the Congress of the United States, which is responsive to nobody in the District of Columbia."

Aside from the lack of a needle exchange program, Holmes Norton cited recent House votes to reinstate a school voucher program in the District, and prevent federal funds to DC clinics that provide abortion services. She compared these votes with the work of racist Southern Democrats who wanted to keep control of the D.C. government out of the hands of D.C. residents.

She said that before D.C. home rule was granted in 1974, District residents were ruled by the federal government, and "that was mostly the work of Southern Democrats whose reasons were, among others… most definitely racial," she said.

"What is happening today is not the work of Southern Democrats," Holmes Norton added. "It is the work of the new Republican majority." In an email to The Hill on Wednesday, Holmes Norton's staff said she was not trying to imply that Republicans had racist motivations (an earlier version of this story said she did assign these motivations to the GOP).

She charged Republicans with running an "autocracy," and implied that Republicans do not see D.C. residents as full citizens.

"Who do you think you are?" she asked. "The residents of the District of Columbia are free and equal citizens. We will not be traded off like we were slaves." 

Holmes Norton also warned that DC funding is at risk because the federal government may shut down if no spending deal can be reached for the rest of FY 2011. She said the government is "stupid enough to close down because Republicans won't take the best deal."

-- This post was updated on April 6 to reflect comments from Del. Holmes Norton

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