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On the Senate floor, Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI) decried the Republicans' rescissions package.
Transcript
00:00Mr. President, Republicans don't actually have to do this.
00:08I understand as well as anybody wanting to go along with your party's president,
00:15especially in the early months.
00:18But being part of an independent and co-equal branch has to mean something.
00:24Being part of the Article I branch means something very specific,
00:28and it means that we're the legislature and we control the purse strings.
00:34Nowhere in the Constitution does it say that if the president wants something, you must do it.
00:43And what worries me the most about this rescissions package, if it passes,
00:48it is one thing for the president's signature accomplishment, signature policy priority,
00:56to be supported by Republicans in the legislature.
01:03I understand that.
01:04I understand the inevitable political momentum behind that.
01:09But this isn't that.
01:12And we have now gone six months
01:14without a single instance of Republicans and Democrats coming together
01:24and establishing that there are some limitations on this president's power.
01:29And if you remember the first Trump term,
01:36there were a couple of moments when the legislature actually stood up to the president,
01:41overwrote a veto of his, rejected a rescissions package.
01:48They stood up for their prerogatives.
01:51And you know what happened next?
01:53Nothing.
01:55Why?
01:56Because that's actually how the system is supposed to work.
02:00We are not a parliamentary system.
02:02We are not a monarchy.
02:04Where the president says, by tweet,
02:07by tweet,
02:09if you don't adopt this exactly how it's written,
02:13you will not receive my political support.
02:15Thank you for your attention to this matter.
02:17And that set us on a course towards passing this legislation,
02:23which I know a dozen, at least a dozen, Republicans hate.
02:29Hate.
02:31It reduces funding for Jordan.
02:33It reduces funding for Ukraine.
02:36It reduces funding for global health.
02:39It did reduce funding for PEPFAR.
02:41It continues to reduce funding for public television and public radio.
02:45By the way, public radio is not just national public radio.
02:49If you are on a reservation,
02:52if you are in a very rural part of your state,
02:56it's often not just the only radio station,
03:00the only communications infrastructure that exists in a rural area.
03:05So it's the only platform for news.
03:07That's true.
03:08It's also the only emergency communications infrastructure
03:12because still many places across the United States lack Internet.
03:18And so Mike Rounds got his deal
03:20so that his tribes will be taken care of,
03:23and I'm glad for him.
03:24But there are 49 other states
03:28where your emergency communications infrastructure
03:33is about to be defunded.
03:35Nobody likes that.
03:38Some people are pissed off about NPR's coverage
03:41or PBS's coverage.
03:42Come on.
03:44You defund an agency
03:45because you disagree with their editorial choices?
03:49Which country is this?
03:50Which country is this?
03:57I want to tell you something a little technical,
03:59but I think it gives away the whole game.
04:02So I'm the top Democrat on the Foreign Ops Subcommittee.
04:06What does that mean?
04:07We do funding for USAID and the State Department
04:09and a few other things.
04:11When we do the appropriations process,
04:13we get letters from every other member.
04:17They're private letters,
04:18and a lot of people sign them,
04:19and they say,
04:20could you please give more money
04:22to whatever it is,
04:24maternal and child health
04:25or malaria prevention
04:26or the PEPFAR program,
04:29the initiative to prevent HIV-AIDS transmission.
04:32So we get a bunch of letters saying,
04:34please plus up this,
04:35please plus up that.
04:36Bipartisan letters.
04:38And we are trying to write a bill
04:40that accommodates all these needs.
04:42A lot of people who are about to vote
04:44to cut all the stuff
04:46are on the side writing me a letter
04:49saying, please increase these accounts.
04:53And why does this matter?
04:56This matters because nobody's voting.
04:58I shouldn't say nobody.
04:59Many, many people are not voting their conscience tonight.
05:02And that's just a fact.
05:09There's a characterization in poker
05:14when you know you're beat
05:16and someone puts money in on the river
05:20and you call anyway.
05:22It's called a crying call.
05:23You give away your money
05:25sort of crying.
05:27This is a crying call.
05:29This is a, I know I'm beat.
05:31I vote aye.
05:33And here's the thing.
05:35We don't actually have to do this.
05:39President Trump's attention
05:40is famously divided.
05:44And if something pops next week,
05:46he will be on that thing next week.
05:48He did not wake up every morning
05:50thinking I want to defund UNICEF.
05:52I want to defund PEPFAR.
05:57His attention will be divided.
05:59And the moment the legislature
06:00stands up for himself,
06:02usually what he does
06:03is he understands power.
06:05And he says,
06:06okay, those guys are asserting themselves.
06:08They're a co-equal branch of government.
06:10And I'm going to have to move on from this.
06:13Because, why do I know this?
06:15We literally did the same thing.
06:16There was a rescissions package
06:18which nobody remembers.
06:20Why?
06:21Because we quietly,
06:23with Dick Shelby and others,
06:26appropriators all,
06:27said, nah.
06:30We hold the purse strings here.
06:33We write the laws
06:34that determine appropriations.
06:37We're not going to do this thing
06:38on a bipartisan basis,
06:40enact a spending plan,
06:41and then come in on a partisan basis
06:44and say, you know,
06:45that wasn't actually the spending plan.
06:46That was just the spending cap.
06:49And the administration
06:49is going to come in
06:50and do whatever it wants
06:52on a partisan basis.
06:53And so what happened
06:54is they rejected
06:55the rescissions package
06:57on the motion to discharge,
06:59which is happening
07:00in about an hour and five minutes.
07:01And then you know what happened?
07:02Nothing.
07:04Nothing politically,
07:06nothing substantively,
07:06except that
07:07we kept the appropriations process alive.
07:11We kept the filibuster alive.
07:14We kept bipartisanship alive.
07:18And in this instance,
07:19it's not just about this institution.
07:21It is literally about people
07:23being kept alive.
07:24For the last five months,
07:29because of the United States' actions,
07:33tens of thousands at least,
07:37maybe hundreds of thousands
07:38of babies
07:40have gotten HIV-AIDS
07:41from their moms
07:42because we pulled funding.
07:48Because Elon Musk
07:49had some bug in his ear
07:51about USAID
07:53and one weekend he said,
07:55we're going to feed this thing
07:56to the wood chipper.
07:58And because Democrats too
07:59and pundits decided,
08:01you know what?
08:03Foreign aid isn't so important
08:04to voters.
08:08I don't care
08:09if it's important to voters
08:11if it ranks on the number one,
08:13number two,
08:13or number three.
08:14We're the United States of America.
08:17And one of the reasons
08:18that we have such a strong reputation
08:20is that we do things
08:23that are right
08:23because they're right.
08:25Not because our voters
08:26are going to reward us immediately.
08:28Not because we get
08:29some geopolitical advantage,
08:30but because we're
08:31the damn good guys.
08:36And right now,
08:37we are ratifying
08:38a bunch of decisions
08:39against our will.
08:43We don't have to do this.
08:50Donald Trump will move on
08:51to the next thing tomorrow.
08:56And if it's not on this thing,
08:57which has low salience
08:59for the voters,
09:00is 18 months
09:02from the next election,
09:04if it's not on this,
09:05at what point
09:06are my Republican colleagues
09:08going to stand up
09:10for this branch of government?
09:11I remain ready
09:15to work with anybody
09:16on anything.
09:18I have talked
09:18to Chairman Graham
09:19about the possibility
09:20of literally enacting
09:22these rescissions,
09:23or at least a portion of them,
09:24in the state
09:25and foreign ops mark.
09:29And yet,
09:30they choose
09:31this legislative violence.
09:33We don't have to do this.
09:36We don't have to operate
09:37under the assumption
09:38that this is some,
09:40that this man
09:40is uniquely
09:41so powerful.
09:43He's the most
09:44powerful president.
09:45He owns the legislature
09:46in a way
09:47that no president
09:48has ever owned
09:49the legislature.
09:52And we all act like
09:54we're just sort of
09:54observers,
09:55like clicking on the TV
09:57and seeing how
09:58our fantasy football team
09:59is doing this Sunday.
10:01We have agency
10:02tonight
10:03to reestablish
10:05that we are
10:06the Article I branch
10:08of government
10:08and that means something.
10:12I yield the floor.

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